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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune |‘ ine I has to be passed on by the Senate it gives temptation to politics, or, what An Independent Newspaper ig nearly as bad, the appearance of politics. | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER For its own reputation let it be hoped that the | (Established 1873) dee, ewes Senate will conduct this judicial proceeding in truly | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| Judicial fashion, assigning the victory, witiou Bismarck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at! favor, to whatever would win it in a court, if it Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. cor B a ass mall ma . ould be put in court, George D Mann .President and Publisher | ‘ | Payable In Advance | Fear 7.20) it is the unfamiliar danger th igh 7 20 Ss a ger that frightens. Tr, per year, Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)..... 4 Daily by m: per year { For three days a leopard, escaped from the 200 | (in state outside Bismarck)... s+ + 6.00 | was Dally by mail, outside of North Dakot Member Audit Bureau of Cire i at large in the Bois de Boulogne, in Paris. | 6.00) Doubtless the poor beast was the most frightened | for an. | Member of The Assoctated Press | At any rate, it hid out and molested nobody, until | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | it was finally found and shot. ‘Then Paris breathed | use for republication of all news dispatches credited | ga cie The a. ai Hl to it or not otherwise credited In this paper, and alse |" The-Junele danger the local news of spontaneous origin published here-| Meantime, on the bouley in. All rights of republication of all other matter | maniacs were ca herein Wo reserved Iotion over, | bt 1, regardiess of | body, as usual, took his life | nd trusted to his own agility, Levery time he crossed the street. ‘That scares no| ‘one, We live in the midst of constant danger and ‘are wisely indifferent. Only the unfamiliar puts us | into panic. ards, the Parisian tax! ening as u pedestrians, and every! j into his own hands | eve Forelgn Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bl Kreage Bldg PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - * : Fifth Ava, Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Limit the Sale | There is one angle to the brutal kidnaping ane | murder of Mary Daly, little Montclair, N. J., girl, by The Sorlie Policy Governor Sorlie believes in building up the per | Harrison Noel, that should not be overlooked, sonnel of the highway department by promotion It was easy for Noel, admittedly insane, to buy all is a wise policy, Wherever and whenever pos |the firearms he wanted. ible men should be promoted from within the de. | He should have been kept in an asylum, but it is partment to the high tions when these be }apparent that the indiscriminate sale of revolvers me vacant It creates an esprit de corps ant | without restriction makes it possible for violently engthens tie morale of the entire department | persons to buy a young arsenal should they i The selection of H.C) Frahm of Minot as sue cessor ta WG. Black is along the dine of thi policy. In tak Mr. Blick s duties, Mr. Frahm bas behind years of service in North | Limiting the sale of firearms by law is inevitable in this country Dakota, He knows road needs of the state and Expression has had close contact with the many problems of The population of the globe tg roughly estimated the highway department. at 1,748,000,000. “Twould be inter It is up to the Highway Commission to formutate | ine To know what peresibagy the policy of the department and the duty of | tHilet ‘engineer lo carry them into execution: Act And it would be just as interesting though not pleasing to know how many carry the wrinkles t come from frowning. Hither ia catching. If the gg: of these people know how to smile —and do ing in an advisory capacity to the members of the | commission, he can do much to shape and direct puch a policy, but the final responsibility rests at majority can smile, ‘twill be easier to get the whole world on 4 itriendly basis. ‘70 Upon tie members of the commission With a new “ jef engineer, the commission how confronted with formulating a program of 6 es ine MiG -yourBelone 15 ees Work. A state highway conference to develop a} g ‘ai 7 . . FROM TRE dole wor ieee iat WONT WA IBSL REBAR. URGE -an » bit an Amariean tourist in Cuba, Could n Hee ae 90D the pr ystem the connty commissioners must | Me been Worse. Suppose it had bit him in Amer-) The most beau be sold on good roads. ‘That work has been done," ; The coon the Rene reatiae to a great extent in most counties. It has been a | Perrier in honor of Mr. Melville S: toris, who is en route to the Or hard uphill job on which the present corps of high Way engineers have worked hard. Working in har- | mony with Mr. Frahm the staff ean ¢ Editorial Comment much in the |b next four years to improve read conditions in the | The Perils of the Air state 4 Ba svarnoe (Duluth Herald) of M j hopes to find a long lost Chinese most brilliant woman st r escorts, bidden to the di rs frien lie has outlined in inteviews an! Progress in air navigation has been wonderful, | dance afterward. On account of the through the medium of tht Highway Bulletin, M+} yuq marvelous achievements. with wf M | distinguished traveler's known quast will insist upon a businesslike administration of hout number are) in the Orient, all the — decorations already on record. were Chinese in character, some of the department, He opposes rming out juicy en-| pat eineering jo to political adherents when the de partment staff can do the work as well and at less! expense. I is proposed to make some changes in the scheme of organization of the department, but sof the staf! who have been responsible for the great inerease in federa] aid projects. the most mous Chinese ents of the last two days show that trav ing through the ai not yet safe enterpris brought in to make the affair and that those who attack extraordinary projects | fectly authenti acute aces nany, “PONY The scene was like fair n air navigation are not the best life insurance! women wore the ¢ of Chine: ks. ladies, and the men were dressed M The great airship Shenandoah, the pride of the| pandarins.- The dress worn by 2 to retain the membe : ae destroyed in a storm while it. wa : an | the Prine Governor Sorlie, however, ix to be commended for} storm le it was undertaking an} vie to Chin | expedition which its sister, tie Los Angeles, had] The dinner favors were in the ‘to abandon because of engine trouble. ‘Thirteen | Shape of the little twin kods of Ko lives were lost in the wreck. Learn Wecae cal And at this writing the PN-9, No. 1, lost sight of | two days ago-on its nonstop flight of twenty-two | Snes, these were cast in silver by hundred miles from San Francisco to Pearl Har-| Chinese metal worker who happe bor, with the goal only a short distance a’ not yet found after thirty crew of five precion: Both these specta total failures | No great airship yet has completed a projected trip across the continent The nonstop flight from California to Hawaii nas | — not been made, nor will it be made right aw A third airplane that was to have gone today will not leave. bis determination to make this department a modet business institution, for it directs the spending of vas sums which if wastefully used will mean slow | progress for the cause of good roads Taking the highway department out of politics and removing it from those influences which seek to feather the the Sor r As it almost impossible to get authentic own nests at the state's expense is of public serviee and will be ap proved of generally. : Miss Perrier, from drawings ix hours. Nor is its} Mr. Surtoris, who also fu careful description in. wr' lives yet found. ular expeditions, therefore, ate ched to a bracelet to be w men and women who w enough to be inv The women st. Just Horse Sense The Finn, sire of the great race horse Zeb, re cently died on a blue grass farm in Kentucky. Ten or 11 years ago The Finn made a great repu tation for himself and Andy Schuttinger, the jockey | i i who usually rode him. And the cret of The Finn's success was not alone speed and stamina, but the ease with whicl he could be “placed” in a big field of horses, “Placing” means horse sense enough to drop behind the pacemaker, spurt ahead or come from behind in the stretch at ti Many a horse hasn't got it It was that ho’ nae that enabled The Finn to win many a race fro: se ue speed i There's a lesson fee ane Rae ienceat| Sa ey guest at Rie Tong dulaie: etna MeeUn ears Viheros mene ¢ couue’ wan he An Empress on the Screen Marcus Loew. After dinner the h doesn't want to be “placed” in the business world. (New Haven Register) ener nee Aa ONE nes He doesn’t want to he a cog in the machine until| “Uneasy Hes the head that wears a crown.” A | furniture land they took a look at. the experience and developed ability will enable him | Pit hackneyed, but especially true during the decade | moon. Miss Bayes thought the moon to direct the machine. : that embraced the World War, the adage hi aie ae adn a found | ““But look at all those ridges on And like the horses The Finn defeated he often |* Vivid verification in the news that the dethroned | it!? exclaimed another guest. “What Beyond doubt both these projects will yet be car | ried out, successfully and. safely. And some time, no doubt, people will think little | more of an airship flight from Washington to San command of the jockey, | Fé#ei9eo, or of an airplane hop from San Fran-| New York—Maybe this story com j cisco to Pearl Harbor, than they do now of an auto-|from the imagination of a pr mobile trip from Duluth to Hibbing. agent, but anyhow ibs reflects) athe j s, A city attitude clearly and truly But that time is yet a little in the future. tHauneredgoe will show dazzling speed at the start and then wilt | ™Pt stria is forced by poverty to take a eae soon has just had its face; in the long run down the sretch, job in the movies to keep the wolf from the door. lifted,” explained Miss Bayes. Ex-Empress Zita, who passed through the unfor- tunate period of the debacle of the downfall of the Must Be Patroled prime issue in the present city el A Cleveland man recently drove from that city to| Austrian throne is en route to America and Holly: {tion campaign. According to the old | wood to take part in the greatest industry of mod: | historians, this same. maligned in’) Buffalo one Sunday. | The roads were crowded and in that distance of | TM times. about 200 miles he counted sixteen smas of the city’s early expansion to cover Living solely on her social prestige in the various | Manhattan island. A hundred vears Meany, all the accidents were caused by neutral capitals of Europe, Empress Zita has pre- |220,the upper part of the island wis who tried to pass other cars on curves, at the top| ‘ented. for the last two years, a pitiable example small villages, of in ef.a hill or at pdints where traffic going in the op of fallen majesty. Brought up in an atmosphere competitive spirit. posite direction prevented. of adulation under the old world idea of imperia! |have remained so but for the rivalr: As a result, the cars of people who were driving | ist the wife of the unfortunate Emperor Carl [engendered between the propriet sensibly were forced into a ditch or smashed. knows nothing other than the monarchistic philos:|to and from the city prope The amazing thing was that during that entire |°PhY which was prostrated by the defeat of the Mid- [one <ronicler. “The reduc distance the Cleveland man failed to see one motor- | "l@ European Allies—the famous Tripte Alliance ~ | {hen “competition induced large nunn cycle officer patroling the road. It passes through ee the Allied forces of the déftensive armies. bers of our citizens and others to dhtes states. The company which has engaged the former |yisit the upper portions of the Maip highways between important cities must be | *PoUse of Europe's second ranking emperor has noc| So was the city developed by rival patroled. That won't stop accidents ‘but there is|®"20Uunced the roles that the scion of royalty will omnibus iivera aude Jere: ipere sed nothing that makes an autoist drive more sensibly |‘#ke, but it is assumed by those speculatively in- |!" ” Bae : than a few motorcycle officers. clined that a story woven around the fall of the | In the locker room of the West bess house of Hapsburg will be in the making with the | Sid¢ YM: C. A. these days you may Up to Senate Now \ actual empress taking the titular part. Thank You Very Much The Brookhart-Steck contest, to see who was| Emperor Carl who resisted the dethronement of | 74, aneiaeclseaetnet ene elected senator from Iowa, has passed the recount | the Austrian dynasty died two years ago, after a| gious director of the Y. Going into stage, with the result still undetermined. It de-| SPectacular effort to set himself up as king of Hun- aaa for ali Preanils,. Be pends on a number of votes on both sides charged |&4'Y- His death closed the regime of the Hapsburss | Unlocked. Wihen -he returned, ¥he with being illegal. : in Austria-Hungary, and in the suburbs of Buda- qeeSE was Bere Nee only. hs watch ar and money, is clothe: Noone but the Senate has authority to determine|Pe%, the dethroned monarch gasped his Iife out.| Missing ‘And his papers ond letters which of these votes to count and which not to| The Daily Mail of London advanced the theory that Rniese latter saved syerything, is ov - |Next mornin, I count, or from whom to subtract those found to Cag vad saben Biponn Me, andtt Ja ail helt |i all bene anaes Mee niiot Gan have been illegal. ee : rae Bonepe shy rather than face a examining his catch peorered shat ’ fe of exile, the head of the house of Hapsburg com-| he was robbing a minis ‘ad that, This is the sort of question which in England Misa ania pers he. decided; was’ unethical and unt would be transferred to the courts, but under Amer- 5 M ° [tucy. The minister is ‘| going to on in THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE nt on a mysterious mission, in which he There were only twelve of — the 1 jade and corra er have had Tor hundreds of | ald hate to think | ause we might | dedly mixed re i savants | jand artists in Los Angeles — being | in Hollywood, country, is a total wreck in Ohio, caught there anid | toris, who obtained it from one of household on his list js | to be in Los Angeles, specially for | they don't a request for y are fire depa jit were. d night | are to fires of which one never r ads in| (Cop: Hey! What th’ Ding Ding? is money. But there is no her unless you know g someone else did it. man thinks he could think different for breakfast, e knows he couldn't, but his w Many of our most beautiful girls ve been t pimer, nd even if a man in Chicago did bite his landlord we all can’t live in Chicago, Mustn't be too positive about any thing. Crazy people usually think the rest of the warld insane. In Detroit, a bad check. age, Age may come A girl with long hair talks more thin one with bobbed hair. Because she is always asking should she bob it. Women talk more than men. But iy as much. This shows they heve more sense than men, Money talks. But a dollar doesn't talk back to a tax collector, Another woman has gotten a di- vor fro movie actor, Un- hitching her wagon from a star as out the time we think, we ht up on everything we hair needs cutti 1925, NEA Ser Ju find n ) 255 e, Inc.) VERETT TR BY CONDO (were 7 NOW, ISTE, MR, S.TRUS —— VERY NARROW tl YouR Mim yp Ir Rapid transit is dragged in for | “They would in all probability! of the several modes of conveyance | the rates of fare consequent upon | STATEMENT is VERY DROAP !) jthe narcotic ; | habit, nevertheless, merits attention. elf he completes the job} if “ht to swim about a] hundred times this s them. But that is different. ' going to take you to house. that| studied more ‘history, Tock. “If you knew more about his- tory and people of America when our country was just starting, you woul be more interested in this old clock. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1925! If you are still interested in evolu- | tion, think of this: Only two ex- | planations have ever been offered j of the fact that the earth is inhabit- ed by many kinds of creatures. One is evolution. The other is special creation. By the one explanation, God first jcreated each species separately, and ‘then destroyed most of them and ted others. Nearly all the species that ever lived 0; earth are now extinct. Through millions of years they have followed each other in a constantly cr | growing order. Each kind lived for a time, and then gave way to another ‘kind, slightly different. This part is not “theory.” It is fact, The explanation of it is theory. One theory is that God destroyed leach kind, leaving it no descendants, and then created another, having no estors, and that he kept it up, ecies after species, for countless The other is that life from the be- ginning was endowed with the pow- cr of variation, and that all the crea- tures inhabiting the earth at any particular time are descended from those which inhabited it before, those surviving which varied in the manner to be adapted to the new conditions, and those that did not vary, or varied in the other direc- tion, perishing. You may debate these two theo- ries, to explain the facts, but the facts themselves are beyond debate. A_ DIFFERENCE IN_SALARIES Robert T. Kane, moving picture producer, offers some American uni- versity $5,000 a year to hire a pro- fessor to teach young men to earn $50,000 a year in the movies. One wonders, if any university can find a man for the job, how long it can keep him at that salary. There is, of course, more cynicism than truth in the saying “those that can, do; those that can’t. teach.” Plenty of men teach who can also do, and accept much less for teach- ing than they could get for doing. But the difference between $5000 and $50,000 rather stretches the limit. FABLES ON HEALTH CUMMING SAYS THIS | EVIL NOT TRIVIAL | BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING Sugeon General, United States Pub- lic Health Service There is a habit all too common among people which deserves our consideration, This is the medicine habit. While not as vicious nor as degrading as bit, the medicine It is quite probable that there are more medicine fiends in the country than there are individual drug fiends, though of course they are | not so constant in their use of med- icine. The habitual user of medicine goes his way unrestricted, purchasing drugs by the bottle full and pills by the hundred. The medicine evil is by no means a trivial one. Many a poor person has been made poorer, many a sick ma a weak woman made weaker because of the mistaken belief that health can be found in a medicine bottle. has been made sicker and many The medicine fiend or the habi- tual user of medicine is aided and abetted in this practice by tradition, by custom: and by the vendors of | these medicines, There are still many people who believe that illness ‘requires the immediate use of medi- | cines and that medicines posses some | terious or miraculous qualities j Which will drive away fever and dis- ease. To be si it is easier to take a dose of medicine than it %: to forego some of the pleasures of indiscretion. Indiscretion in diet, over-eating, over-drinking, careless habits and improper living, however, cannot be corrected by hourly or’ daily — re- jcourse to the pill box or the medi- cine bottle. A little reading and a_ litte thought will reveal the fact that there are very few specifics. How foolish it is therefore, for the indivi- dual to expect even a reasonable amount of benefit front some of the cure-all medicines now on the mar- ES SHOULD MINOR PART After all, medicines valuable as they are, play only a minor part in the treatment of disease. When in- telligently administered they helpful agents which assist in combating the invasion of disease- producing germs, Medicines do not and cannot act as substitutes for rightful and healthful habits of living. If there were a epecific for every disease known to man the study of medicine would be a simple science and health could be purchased at the drug store. Unfortunately this is not the case, despite the fact that such an idea is often conveyed by many of the widely advertised cures for “liver disorders,” “kidney complaints,” “stomach troubles” and various other ailments. The evil in the medicine habit may not result entirely from the particular drug taken into the sys- tem. A far greater evil may result from this habit because of the fact that the promiscuous user of medi- cine is given a faise sense of secur- ity in the remedy purchased, while the disease, if there be a disease present, may progressively incre in severity. SOME ALWAYS CARRY PILL BOX Most of us in the course of our daily work have met men and wo- men who constantly carry upon their person a box of pills into which they dip regularly and from which they take religiously as though life were actually dependent upon the regularity with which the dose is administered. It is true that the medicine fiend may obtain some relief from his pill habit, but such benefit, you can be sure, is only temporary and in most. cases it is probably a mental benefit rather than a physical one. “Medicines act as cures in only a very small percentage of diseases. The results of disregarding the laws of personal hygiene cannot be cor- rected by drugs, You cannot find health in a bottle of medicine nor can you correct the injury which you have inflicted up- on your body in careless habits by dosing yourself with medicine. Lead the simple life. Eat plenty of good food. Live in the fresh air and the sun- shine as much as you can and obey the well recognized laws of personal bygiene. Present yourself to a reputable physician at least once a year for a thorough physical examination and if disease attacks you place yourself under the care of a physi- cian. rie In all probability he will give you medicine to be sure, but he will do much more than that and the medi- cine that he gives you will not alone effect a cure. It will aid but the enforced restrictions which he will place upon your habits and modes of living will play a much greater part. ; Cultivate the annual physical ex- amination habit, and just in propor- tion as the annual physical eximina- tion habit spreads so will the medi- cine fiend disappear. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Now then,” said Tick Tock, the clock fairy, when they had left the little traveler clock ticking brightly on the mantel, “I shall take you Twins to. a fine - big mansion in which there are wonderful pieces of art and rare old treasures.” “What does that mean?” asked Nancy who was as bad as Nick for asking questions, "* : “Well,” said Tick Tock, “by art is meant a lot of things. ‘Principally pictures and statues, but it also means other things such as tapes- tries. Tapestries are pictures woven in cloth instead of being painted on canvas, And it also means fine em- broideries, too. Embroideries on chairs and fire-screens and tuble-covers which people were so fond of doing in the olden times, And it also means lovely things to ornament rooms with, Vases and clocks and—” “[- suppose ert means anything beautiful,” said Nancy. : “That's exactly right,” said Tick Tock with a firm little nod. “Ex- actly right. For even lovely old fur- niture and rugs are works of art. As you say, just anything that man has made that is really beautiful. “Is a bird a work of art—or a flower?” asked Nancy. “They are beautiful. “More beautiful than any work of art,” said the fairy. “But God made them. Man can never make anything one-millionth so fine as either of as many lovely works of art. not only pictures and vases and statues and ri clocks as well. There is one fine old clock that needs repairing. And it has a story.” » but fine old furniture and “Oh, dear! Let’s ‘hurry! I'd love to see it,” said Nancy. “It is too bad you children haven't ” Tick a “Well, can’t you tell us?” said Nancy quickly. “That would be bet-; ter than studyin T think.” it about it in books, “That's 80,” said Tick ‘Tock. “You are very You .remember the grandfather clock ‘told 1 am! you about a war, and about the Eng- lish soldiers coming, called Red Coats, and how the clock’s mistress stuffed the silver-ware into him and hung him down an old well?” “Yes, we remember,” cried the Twins ‘quickly. “In a way this clock has a little bit to do with that same war too, attioogh not exactly. But if it hadn't been for that war, this fine clock would not be in America. It came from France. But here we are now. I can unlock this basement window with my magic key. Now we will go up these stairs to the first floor where the clock is. We can make all the noise we like for everyone is away. They won't be home until next week. There's the clock on that mantel. “Oh!” cried the Twins in wonder, for it really was a beautiful clock, all white alabaster and gold. Real gold it was, such as one seldom sees on a clock. ; (To Be Continued.) The cornerstone of the original capitol building in Washington was laid by George: Washington Sept. 18, FLAPPER FANNY say: All autoists but you arg reckless, -*2 =~ —