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: : lot land values. Florida's day is coming. ‘There are! The Bismarck Tribune “27°, "ortrs ae Tate oas| An THE STA ( Bismarck, N. 1D, Bismarck, as seer George D Mann PAGE FOUR Published by the Bismarck Tribune | greater opportunities in this city and state today pendent Newspaper for safer investment than are available in far away WSPAPER | tetas. Be | The ridiculous claims of some Florida promoters Company, | WUL bear watching. Better investigate before bet and entered at the postoffice at) ting your hard earned money upon whether land mado chiss mail matter, | prices will rjse or fall. Prosident and Publisher |! °°"° peor de Establishea 1 Subseription Rates Payable In Advance What Howard Elliott Learned Dally by carrier, YOAT. eee eee eaes I have never seen the roads in better pan ry anien oer (in Bismarck) conditic nd T have never found the people (in state out Dally by mall, outside Member A Member The Associated 1 nge for republi to it or not ¢ er the local n AN right herein are also re Fore’ G. LOG CHICAGO Tower Blidz PAYNI NEW YORK marek)... see coos (BOO: in better spiritg than T found them on this th Dakota . 6.00 trip udit Bureau of Cireulation “it aide Bi is just as essential to the prosperity Dress {the northwest that the railroads make a onutied te: the fair carning as it is for the farmers to get of all news dispatches credited a good price for their products.” lited in this paper, and alse, origin published here moot all other atter of The Asse sis exclusive ie above are two quotations from an interview ch Howard directors of the North len Representatlyes ‘ AN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT Kresge Bldg ott | show n Pacific, gave to the Twin papers. He had just returned from a trip over | deand returned optimistic. ‘There w every | reason for his optimism, AN business i BURNS AND § a decided revival. Unemployment is di nh Ave. Ridg. minishing. The only blot on the horizon is caused | 7 Vy troubles in the anthracite regions, This | omoal Sll and County newamnen) trike aifeets the manufacturers at a time when they Recess Valuable arg Hooded sith ontiers ; e ino Reports indicate that gross earnings of all rail | : ; : Ways operating in) Minnesota during the first) six! i Fe months of 1425 inereased by more than two million . de / This reflects a decided revival in business over the t | | ' Attorney General Shafer finda that the newts ae an _ of Administration has no right to. abandon | tear line, is there any legal barrier against | atouera | ty going upon its own street and tearing up tt y fetwe ewer th Mocks of the track? An opinion as to the city’s | veces cchong MEMES In the matter might be iuminating | Editorial Comment Relief at Last (Waterbury Republican) Mothers generally will he de y interested in the e few x tatement made by Dr, Erie Pritchard of the Infants recess ho. it London, that the crying of babies is gen Tits: thy F l the mae only a habit. They will be more interested nenver er } with mod jin ination that the habit is induced ern education, the bes SGnInW ne still old | in ce degree by the infant's imitation of sounda | fashioned enough to feel that recess in the grade, he the doctor, he has seen and and Junior H ols at of great value heard an infant that cried like a fog horn and an- | that made a noise like a locomotive wh’stle. | Should Reveal Act he one had picked up the habit on ship board; the | Publication of income tax payments general other's home Was near a railroad station. over the t tions, newspaper by the various news wa little attempt elaborate or detail st ments T e law providi should be repealed. It in the Cong publicity hoped to publication of the which to base ch Some of the me income. In th has written oppo other cases men « in income tax would immediate People of great w a and are pern States, Tuesda Wit s that brought about this w excep Phis information induces two major speculations used the returns made available | First, it would seem that parents should be very ncies of the country. There | ear ful in choosing the sites of their homes. A home | except in rare instances to secure] too near a raveled highway is likely to hold | nents of income tax pay: | an infant that cries like a klaxon. One too close to | ja tre line may well reverberate to the gong-like \ | ng for publicity of tax payments! wails of its babies. For like re sons no home should | © Radicals | be within sound of a boiler factory. ves no pu a fire house, 2 ill, Think o e me baby that cried in the accents of the sturng indicates little upon! phone! Or the trap drum! rm of} peanut stand, a waterfall or a dance thaving a detect tax dodgers, but th: irges of this nature Second. if the infant is likely to imitate st tof great wealth have no taxable | sounds as those of the fog horn and the locomot wh tate and others, name after name le, he ought to be ju nd pleasant soun Why not hang the canary's| reat wealth pay as low as $5.00! cage in the nurser: Then when the little darling | © publication of such an amount! wakes up at 2 a. m. to take his ve exercise he Iy create) qo owron sing twitt instead of a heavy reverses in some | Piercing uproar that will shatter sleep all over the! mitted to deduct same from income | block. Or the phonograph, supplied with plenty of site it, “No taxable income.” tn! impression, | will make merely a ple ealth have often bringing their tax payments far below what | Sweetly subdued melodies, might be employed to the people think shou tax exempt securities { None of the unc involved in tax returns e: lished. Frank hess but the gove The publication cur erally are publish theory that public repeal of the jaw some instances do devours news of this type and as newspapers es tially are purveyc come “good copy wealth. Readers 4 those who pay le Where to draw is difficult vy the space limitati papers generally ¢ by wealthy men of national tame or ten in their ow fair as possible u should have become a law Ca Whatever fate h will go down in the “swatter.” To pe not to mention the 59 he chalked up in 1921, is no} be permitted in the busi mean achievement player, but thousa hox office to ever the fence card in big league His differences aftermath of Rut showing made by is a long time for any baseball player to hug the | (Des Moines Tribune-News) Be lime-light. Thig retirement from may stage a real against it. Watch Your Step of road perils. Recent disciosures prove that Florida is not all A spooning driver threatens the safety of eve: a@ new El Dorado. == made in-the land ity, but serves no other need. New! Id be the case, Others invest in| same end Awakening Taxpayers t to be pub i = lerlying 4 isons or cireumstanc ug this information no one’s busi | (Muncie Evening P rnment’s and the taxpayer of the tax paid may | When every taxpayer comes to understand per satisfy reader | fectly that a por n of every dollar unnece. papers gen-| expended in the administration of government ely on the | Whether that government be national, state or purely ity ultimately will bring about a/ local, is taken out of his own pocket, and when! | | 8) | | | | ing these returns lar that can do no good and might in| the taxpayers of all communities have organizations | great harm. ‘The public eagerly | of their own whose duty it will be to watch all public | en |expenditures, then we shall ors of news, the tax returns be rm s than $300 or 4 bserve a wonderful | ving of money and a falling off in tax rat | « they concern men of | where. not interested in| The taxpayer does not object to pa 0. for he knows that they are as necessary to the! the line in publicity of thio kind orderly conduct of his and his neighbor's affairs as | publish a complete list is beyond |food is necessary for the maintenance of his body, | ons of most newspapers, News- | but he resents not getting a dollar's wort! onfine their stories to ta ever} i | ng his taxes, | i of gov: axes paid |etnment for every dollar's worth of the tax money | nd the first eight |he is forced to pay nostate. Such a policy seems. nd Nor is he niggardly; being fair-minded, he believes that the public laborer is | worthy of his hire as any other kind of laborer, | 3 a federal statute that neve se of Babe Ruth | expense and permit underlings to run his officia olds in store for Bimbo, his name) business. The taxpayer who thinks knows that! annals of baseball as a mighty |he would not permit such a condition in his office, | Ie 299 home runs in ten years! factory or store, and sees no reason why it should | ess of government i as a matter of self-protection, taxpay-| ing in many communities for the pro- | lie may not be the greatest | Driven to it nds have paid good money at the | ers are organ e the mighty “Babe” wallop the bal! | tection of their rights, some of these being in In Ruth has been the best drawing diana. The movement should spread until every circles, city and county budget included, with Huggins apparently are an | palate h's batting slump and the poor The “Necking” Peril | | | | the Yankees. Ten years on top! — j may be the beginning of Babe's| It is a serious offe: to drive a car while intoxi | the big circuit. Then again he|cated, but there is more than one form of intoxica- | come-back, but the chance seems | tion. Auto necking parties are jebriated by puppy-love, and cars in whi ers are so intoxicated are not the le: Some great fortunes have been | One on the road; he shows off bursts of exce boom in that state, but the losses | speed and then siows to an impeding craw are seldomed heralded in the press. Those of a | weaves in and out from one side of the road to the | speculative turn in the Northwest have flocked to | other; it is impossible to gues Florida and purch: will be able to get back the original investment—|out discussing the propriety of necking, surely it if they live long £ elosed a gigantic fure salesmen were employed to prey on widows,| Even the youths guilty of driving when suffering orphang and the over credulous. The federal gov-)from this form of intoxication should not object to érnment hag taken a hand to stem the hectic boom/a ban on it. If privacy means nothing to them they | Sci be WARATAWIDS. Jarge. tracts of eavatament, aad...) AAUAR RRO, tRah Grivine.a.Ger,.exen,.ah haphazard, ‘California is suffering now from over inflation|{s a serious handicap. what he will do or! ‘ular moment. With ased Jand. In some instances they | where he will go at any part enough. may ‘be said that the practice on public highway fraud in Florida land. High pres- | control. OAT TE ES jott, chairman of the board of | | Downey | and resounded with gayety now are ; newer buildings. Only two of them | mands come by night to fill the res- | of these restaurants that patrons | carry plates of chert tone clams to Luxurious offices raided recently in Chicago dis-|is a menace which is within the police power to/ the meenines and Pe little kid-! | ent, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, Worried iT BLOW OVER/ } wee In yoy : IBLE SPELL Le yeotoh WEATHER | “Our joivt navies must keep open the ways and guard the peace of the Pacific,” say American, Japanese and ' British naval officers, when they toast each other. It is a pleasant | phrase, and always evokes applause. | “But against whom shall they de- |fend it?” inquired a lady less train- ed than masculine platitudinarians {to accept phrases without analysis. |; “Surely there are no pirates or | buccaneers so strong as to require \ battleships to police them, and there jis no other national navy that could |eope with the least of these; still Hess with all combined.” |The answer, of course, could not have been made in publi {an international social y |. For the only frank answer would ihave been: “Against each other.” |So long as these three great fleets patrol the Pacific, no other will dare de it. And so long as each of is invincible in its home wa- against either of the others, but could be endangered by the other two combined, no one of them will dare break the peace. They are thus ntee of peace, against each s well as against all others. Against pirates and _ privateers alone, destroyers. speed boats, and a few base cruisers would be a more effective police than the present war armament. Against any outside men- ace, a quarter of the present force {would be enough. Against each other, anything is enough, provided | it ig balanced. The Washington Con- ference balanced it, on one basis. It can go lower only by being again I balanced, by joint agreement, on a new basis. When America Is Out of Debt If things keep on their present course, America will almost have re- : BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING | Surgeon General, United States Pub- CLIPPING FROM THE PITTS but I have got to do so. Tl Y TOM lic Health Service BURGH SUN. ent a cent in the world, and I'm . . In very early times it was observed we been some surprising) hungry yes, hungry, Joe. 1 don't [that tuberculosis was more apt to in the Pres pearl) think I was ever hungry before in occur at certain ages and under cer- clusively stated my life. tain conditions of living. Hippo- “1 don't deserve this from you, crates, the father of medicine, noted Joe, You know I wasn't’ keen on ZS that it was most frequent between returning from South America, ages of eighteen and thirty-five. where I could havo married that old common knowledge now among Jon & : ta and in a few years be eta ; Mahi rv » a rich widow, for the don is ol a May any, cause: eulcn I las to two of his best detect work and th eir man We would hate to be a bow-legged ummer girl and alw wonder if L 5 wie we were standing in the light. weakens the individual lessens his were a rather obscure but very | and quite ill. xoe ralited the pic. ance and predisposes to tuber- respectable hotel in the west end of; ture so beautifully, however, th Th P sort culosis, A powerful physique is not e he owever, decided to take your word for it. You he most popular summer resort Coe carily A sa : w you got away, and were he only one left of the whole gang,| het to work to consequently the jewels would. be- a :-|long to you if you could get them.| But there's one nice thing about ‘ses and sue-| You said you knew they were still in| summer. The first three of evi- that room, for Zoe Ellington had| are the hottest. ts thejthem that ‘night when everyone had ing ther There is a growing conviction that infection in tuberculosis usually oc- curs in childhood. The younger the child and the months more intimate the contact and the more prolonged the exposure the greater is the danger. It is esti- become suspicious y th a bit, of refreshing news,|YC#tS of age are due to tuberculosis a bit of refreshing news.!}0'me form. ry year, the United States eats 5 driv intent 10,000,000' worth of ice cream. annie pom Sher lise ieee tant. It is believed that most peo- ple are infected before the age of sixteen. Botween the ages of twenty and forty about one-third of aii deacns are due to tuberculosis. It is most frequent among the poor because they cannot avoid fatigue : nor nurse minor ailments nor es- k shot himself-| cane other diseases which predis- pose to infection, Nor can they house and feed themselves in a manner to strengthen their resistance to the germ. The poverty stricken worker, the struggling student, the religious re- cluse, the roue and the rounder, the ged in a/ and helped you to obtain them. You _ where it was told me if I did not come with you, sight except to’ someone who| you would give me away to Don looking about the place most| Sp i | was not to blame because you ance on water is deceptive. A {ter was addressed to Joseph! did not find them where you expect-| man may think he is all at sea over, nd it was abel.”| ed to. I don't think I am to blame| Something when he isn’ The postmark been} because you have gotten tired of me . See ee - mailed at the postoff at 7/80 soon. I have tried to be true to And sickni in the United States o'clock on last Tuesday, the 27th. you, but now I will confess that one| Costs $1,500,000,000 a year, and it} The letter follows: — jof the reasons I returned with you| isn’t worth anything. “T can't unde d why you h that i I wanted to sh air hot been, neat ‘or three | get back on the whole world for what| _, Seattle bank ; When you left me the other it did to me when that hoy fell in| Felt badly because he couldn't get Y been reconnoitering| love with me. I wanted to make! his monthly total. A total loss. mills, you said you) that woman who took it upon herself ae n the morning, and| to rescue the boy, suffer. I thought ppen anywhere. have s. you.! perhaps if I could see him again f ¢ man who got a di- you told me not to write| could make him believe in me again, | Yoree Wasn't a movie star at all. Snowshigh up in the Rockies is that's| disolute spendthrift, the miser, the head, hold the, prize aloft before de-| melting this summer. But ee ah aanitallge ce) ; vouring it. | proper. Everybody's doing it. cette, “the, chronteally, (tired. (busi: And here a baby chewing vigorous- palsies nee man, ani enone, emuse nae ly upon the succulent claw of a lob-| We are going to discuss the Rift| ity sirl, are predisposed to tuber- ster. ‘There a sleek cat so surfeited| question soon as they cautpre a|Culosis through unwise or unworthy with food that it no longer will, re-| town whose name we ean pronounce, | ¢haustion, of physical resources, gard a fish with more than a look of qufek sof Braver, Sued ittamed disdain. Fall's coming. Already the grid- fect 5 If fresh fish are to be had any-| iron is making faces at the midiron. bepeullocis is lack atsprorerifood. [A where, it is at Sheepshead Bay. It = the average American home too lit- ie ; FABLES ON HEALTH | so they ive or sell their fish direct LACK OR PROPER FOOD nd proves that the} to get out quickly. . What's worse than a fat man at) mated that about 10-por cent of all issionor's theory is correct. | “You told me you would give me| a dance on a hot night? |e hs amiongachildren, under: fifteen m a t J fallen) half of them if T returned with you ; H SEPTEMBER 3, 1925 paid the money we borrowed to loan Europe, as well as all we spent our- selves to help Europe, before Europe has fairly begun to repay us. Treasury officials estimate that the whole American debt may be iped out, by American taxes alone, in twenty-five years. Italy talks of a moratorium of ten years before even beginning to pay, and France is jockeying for as long a delay as possible. Even after they begin paying, their installments, on interest and_princi- pal combined, will be less than we are paying out in interest alone on the same money. That means that they will never pay any of the principal, nor all of the interest, and that for as long an interval as’ possible they will pay nothing at all. Meantime, before they have much more than. started, we shall have finished. Whatever comes in after that will be “velve | Carping at Flapper Old Stunt Carping at the flapper and her ways is “old stuff." Doubtless Eve began it, with Cain’s daughter. At any rate, here is the authority of the Roman poet, Horace, as to how it was, nearly two thousand years ago: “Our grown girls love to learn Tonian ways |; Of lewd ‘suggestion in the dancer's school; Nay, each with evil tricks is full from her callow days. Perhaps some day a generation will live on earth with memory enough to recall when it was young. Until then, the flapper, each genera- tion under a new name, will be per- petual subject of discussion. Her crime is to be young, when we are old. children's diet during the first ten years of child life and even when food is properly prepared for chil- dren it must not be forgotten that it often takes time and patience to induce a playful, active child to eat proper things in sufficient quantity and at the proper time. The capitalist who hastily con- sumes a scanty breakfast of toast and coffee, works busily all day in his office with on hasty lunch at noon, is not well fed even though he consumes a full meal in the evening and has a little lunch after the the- ater and may have taken in the course of the day a greater quantity of food than he actually needs. The child who refuses at table wholesome articles of food such as bread and butter, vegetables and meat, cannot maintain a satisfactory degree of nourishment. A lack of knowledge of food values is very common, especially in. citi where the products of the delicates- | sen shop attracting the eye and the palate, tempt the housewife of mod- erate circumstances to give delicates- sen shop products precedence over wholesome soups, vegetables, roasts and stews from the home kitchen. Tuberculosis Ig Contagious At the present time there are many people who still do not know : tuberculosis is contagious and because of this lack of knowledge do not take precautions. The anti-spitting laws now exist- ing ‘in most cities deserve to be backed by a strong public sentiment. The viciously careless consumptive who daily exposes his family or neighbors to disease should be put under proper institutional control. It is dangerous to house young chil- dren with consumptives but it would be difficult to enforce laws that re- quire that the young child shall be removed from the house. It is more practicable, perhaps, to remove the consumptive to an insti- tution where he can be trained into carefalness. Tuberculous persons should not be allowed to follow the vocations of dairymen, cooks, wait- ers, nursemaids or teachers. is from docks that adjoin the res-| A woman from New Orleans took|*!e time is given to the study of ane taurants that the deep-sea fishing] poison while in Chitago, but there | - Sea wens smack sets sail. Many who go on|may have been other reasons. right. We know a big piece of these trips are in pursuit of. sport pcsiaay - ly. They know not what to do! Two would-be English Channel — dence here and there. In Brookiyn,| 0% ‘i . i ‘ ald-be > English, “Channe! dence here an lice: | Lnubrogkive, | with a fish after they catch it. And) swimmers don’t eat fish, That's all} Some people are so crazy. Which Manhattan you may stroll along a! is why there are so many salads. street lined with new —apartmicnt houses, and blocks and stores und teeming with children of the dwellers. You turn a corner and you! are upon a century-old house sitting | insedate techusion beyond a defense fwHatT ARS XOU GOING IN THERE af honeys roses, and holly-; / < z hocks. It is as though you have| (©V@RSTT S$ NOU DONn/y meE4q losed your eyes for a moment and {To TGtc MS : a have been wafted on a magic carpet to a new country. YoU GverR Fauml SAT !) ye patches of its old existence in evi cheese who doesn’t eat cheese. ‘ w liv. ipe old EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO |/«. ve can See Beats (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) For, x) =“ || ADVENTURE OF i v i | THE TWINS - And again if you were to go to the! outskirts of the city where the broad | fields begin you would find blocks of | houses, all like so many peas i pod, with all the natural ve killed by the mechanical of community building. Thus from the air the city look like a mammoth ecrazy-quilt, rathe shabby and ragged around the edges ‘BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON PLACE WHERE CUCKOO CLOCKS ARE MADE “Sit down,” said the friendly cuckog on the cuckoo clock, when he had finished calling the hour. tle men of the mountain who, like the cuckoo, were carved out of wood and put on the clock for ornaments. The three of them had suddenly come to life in the dim old living room, where the Twins and the clock fairy had come to visit—or to put the Swiss clock in order, I should say. They were not really visiting at all. Upstairs deaf old Mister Kubler slept soundly on, not even dreami of what was going on beneath him. “Will you tell us a_ story if we stay?” asked Nancy. “We can’t stop very long as we have a lot of work To me one of the mos Z| spots where the faded glories of a by-gone dav still are in evidence is Sheepshead Bay. Once all the great sports of the land gathered there to watch the horses run. They came, too, to see the first auto races in the land. The rambling frame hotels that once were bright with lights weatherbeaten, ramshackle affairs crowded into the background — by still meke a pretense of being hotels. to do tonight. Nick and I are help- Along the bay front, however, some- Y J ing Tick Tock to put all the old hing of the spirit’ of the haleyon| , y Y, clock in order before morning.” days still persists. Here the gour- ~ “It won't take me long,” said the little cuckoo. “No, it won't take him long,” echoed the little wooden mountain men stiffly. t ; nts \//, So Tick Tock and the Twins sat staid in line awaiting a table. In = A= q YG | down on a sofa and the little cuckoo crudely built little shacks men Z| began: swarm about the counters eating " “Cuckoo clocks are made in a far clams, oysters and salt-water muscles |’ | \ “Wy country across the sea called Swits- of the shell, : ] % erland, It is not as far as Germany, __ The curb is lined with autos bring- but farther than France and right ing the hungry from afar. Fathers near Italy. So the people in Switzer- land speak either French or German dies stretch out to receive them, like| Sisco cruat ie bone user eat little robins greeting a foraging par- Biase, aeat is one queer thing “Another queer thing about it is that it is higher than ethhe eauntey, ii Epa art of the é e 8 r world. is nearly ail mounain: SAR Jinn Reore, Hehe, AigRiog with, 4 | and_even the, flat, by laces where there! cesses and then, tilting back her J NIG Ol | Eeeae' cutee “tare manent: ae taurants and oyster bars which line the water side of the street. So great is the crowd in several} It is not an uncommon sight to see a woman in splendid raiment stand- ing on the walk rending a oe mi places among the mountains, or . id 1 ;, clouds would be below you and you Yes, do sit down,” begged the would have to look down, instead of what they call table lands. It is sometimes called the roof of Europe, Switzerland is, just on that account. “There are other odd things about Switzerland,” said the cuckoo. “Yes, many odd things,” said the little wooden mountain men stiffly. “One is that Switzerland seldom has any wars and needs a very small army. “Another is that it has no place where the sea touches, so it needs no navy, that is no ships. “But it is a beautiful place, about the most beautiful in the world,” went on the cuckoo. “It has many wonderful lakes with castles and lovely cities built around them. “And its mountains are so high and so rugged that they look like giant forts reaching to the clouds. Indeed they go up much higher than the clouds, and if you were standing on top of one of these mountains, the up, to see- them.’ “My goodness!” said Nick. “It must be some place.” “It is,” said the cuckoo proudly. “It is indeed!” said ‘the little wooden men importantly. “But that is not all, There is more to come.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ——__._____—- || & THOUGHT | o—____—___-_____ Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them.—M. hew 7312, There is no beautifier of complex- ion or form or behavior like the wish to scatter joy, not pain, around us.— Emerson. 5 READ TRIBU! WANT ADDS ' !