The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune’ by the distributor jon An Independent Newspaper i THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | before he finally cashes in s merchandise exaggerating His Importance to admit the British communist United States was well within the . but act, the admi Sstablish 1873 Aicieittetiteahh Refusal Pe al to the | authority of Sec: | the general impression is that as forced the | tor into martyrdom and given an insignificant | puppet undue prominence in the public eye. to communism might been admitted Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, D., and entered at the postoffice at’ Bismarck, ay second class mai] matter, George D. Mann... President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per year..... i : Daily by mail, per year (in Bism Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)..... Dally by mafl, outside of North Dakota. Member Audit Bureau of Clreuly A greater blow dealt if he had and upon first ut acter, have been as other delegates | rek). ances of an inflammatory char-; y have been dealt with. His! bership in the House of Commons reflects thed ner in which Great Britain deals with this type an incendiary. By ignoring them » within the law, they he could eas Member of The Associated Press. ciated Press is exclusively entitled to the all news dispatehes credited ited in this paper, and a 1 published her all other matter I The A nge for rep to it or not 1 the local news of in, All r herein are but insisting discount thei wdmitted th tle s communist pre but the refusal let him ent given him just the opening looking for} und his kind always welcome and relish. ably would have ne 1 harm, Forelgn Representatives G. LOG PA 2 COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT | } Tower Bldg Kreage Bldg. | 7 | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Price of Crude Rubber he wa NEW YORK Fitth Ava, Bldg./ ‘The financail statement of one of the largest] (Oficial City, State and County Newspaper) of crude rubber in the countrythe United | eieets : ti mi - Rubber Company —for the first sik months! Finds It Pays shows profits 42 per cent greater than for Cds ne weeks now when the drive for |e Hst six months of last year, says the New York | 000 to advertiae Nott Dakota vant to attract Jourbal of Commerce | Hew. selllers will hegin. Slot ot! This year erude rubber prices were sent. sky MOREY to n -dtate which: | practically noth. | focketing by the ritish restrictions on export vtinn | me tithe last te Fertil ng the of the OL erude rubber from its provinces, Last year crude | world the opportunitic investment here, But | TUbber prices were low | tis ay mp to what some i Florida cities are spending to develop their dis Modernism | trict. ¢ 1 th Dakoti's resources, thes ‘otlowing the modernization of “Hamlet Great | cities h cant asset tain now sets Harriet Beecher Stowe's “Uncle | T ¢ That city ina four) Tom's Cabin" to jazz. A slave girl in a very ab-| day for promoting the | breviated costume danced madly before a cheering | inter vone knows that Plorida’s develop | audience as Uncle Tom “killed” Simon Legree with | ment and prosperity today is built almost solely on) # modern automatic. | advertising | Isn't that carrying modernism to the nth degree? ! New York and Chicago papers contain full | | pageo day after day, calling attention to the oppor | ‘The Chinese used umbrellas 3000 years ago, so| tunities in Florida. This canpaign of advertising | people have heen borrowing things 2000 ycars | HMlorida extends Millions | Kolng into promotion, and most of it is being used | from coast to coast are in the papers of the big cities. That it is getting | . ; Mem’ is cleariy-idemonstratya: ty wir Haws Laken Editorial Comment place in Florida during the last two or three years. | A great percentage of the tourist trade hag heen | Men in Public Office turned fre capital : Both Florida » California to I ida. Millions of new | into the development of the state. | (Flint Daily Journal) ve gone Samuel H. len Church, president of Carnegie and California have built up a great Institute, voices a ing need in the United States tourist’ business through advertising Me stl tor more education, especially among men in public has cooperated with private initiative and | office or in the government employ Speaking be lavishly in bringing into the state new settlers ant additional capital “While we have made a certain progress in estab- | If a city the size of Daytona can raise $1 ishing an intelligent civil service in this country. a four day drive, the entire state of North Dakott! no one seems to think it nece for body of teachers he said 1 y to require that = THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Static ¢ For in WA mike! See IF YOU CAN FIND OUT WHAT | MAKES IT Do =P TAA! reporter that pry from that w, which was ined the neek- lace from the safe before Miss El lington arrived in the room, and then hearing others coming on the scene they decided to kidnap Miss iHington, One of the men was en- he had a different th of Commissioner Laid that the th ob Aas — 3 Ziwttd> z-wabD suai renewed in Chinatown. gangs are killing z S- ue Also the gun h other off after a truce that lasted almost a year, Some day science may learn — just what effect changes in seasons and consequent. changes in blood may | some way, giving the proceeds tOj pave on human behavior and thus ie 3 be enabled to make us a bet | The jewels now consist of two JAMES W. | necklaces, as Mrs. Prescott's sist 2 left. to her her wonderful necklace, among her other jewels, at the time of her deplorable death. The man who made the second at | tempt to obtain the pearls is still at 11 Mr. Prescott is extremely nervous about his wife and children hopld be able to do as well if not better in the! men who aspire to elective offi of great respon-{ trusted with the pearls. The ring.) as long as this man ree, and he same time. Confidence in the state is here, Industry is | sibility shall be, in the best sense, educated men.| leader of the gang, thinking the has offered a reward of ten thousand present, and the “go-get-it.’ J ey need é Be eee i tee “| jewels were perfectly carried | dollars to any one who will appre- Hs ikidership. ‘The Goan — luck hana ion fact there Is. perhaps, a prejudice among the} the girl out, and the man dropped | hend him, It is very probable that aad » ; North Dakota As mass of the people against the election of educated} the jewel case in the vase, thinking | Mrs, Prescott and her two boys will ation is trying to develop that leadership in ¢ men in public life. That is a curious example of| that if they were caught, nothing, leave the city for a while until things community, Most of the money raised will be spent} the psychology. of the crowd, When are, Would be found upon them e calmed down a bit, we outside the state wth Dakota newspapers will sic! call in the best physician; when in trouble hare hardly at all in the funds to be raisee.! ye retain the best lawyer; when we build a house I cally all of it aside from a small percentage] we get the best i hitect, and when | bridge we employ the best engineer. But when it comes to politics, which means government, «we seem content all too often to choose the man who is unfitted both by capacity and education for suc thay : , we build a for promotion will go into various forms of adver The mony ion of this} state and direct the flow of immigration and capital lising in the great centers of population will be spent to correct an unfair impr orth Dakota, which teems with opportunities. se! 4 ANY > fie leh cherie: cn ive| his companions, ‘hoping that the cess in any other field of high service, and give py i t behind the Greater North Dakota Association.| into nis Hands those great powers whieh alfect our! wes would not be found ant he tis ono of tle frat really constructive steps toward | ei - 4 should regain his liberty. 4 It is one of the first re : y constructive steps toward) wettare in matters of law, and public order, and tax-| convicted men will be questioned state development launched in the last decade or s ition, and, beyond all the rest, of human liberty.” | again today to find out airy one of If the masses are prejudiced against the intelle | tual minority it is because they believe they can hest govern themselves by electing their own kind | to office. With their saperiors in office the people would be more susceptible to the feeling of being governed, although history teaches that ignorance i he arch tyrant. he public attitude of which Dr. Church speaks | Getting Inside Facts Cooperative ventures engaged in by been teaching them many things they learned that it costs considerable to get the product of the farm to the table of the ultimate conswmer. Much of the delusion that they a | farmers have pecially have gouged by the middleman has been dispelled for tho: who have been actively connected with cooperative! was the inspiration of that adage, “Everybody marketing ventures. It has been a good thing for | business is nobody's busines: The average voter the farmers. Of course there svems to be on paper that citizenship and a tax re- an unreasonable spread between what the farmer gets and what his products actually bring in the final market. Abuses there are to be sure, but are the profits of the middleman in the final analysi as great as the agitator maintains? Minnesota has a concrete example in the Potate Exchange. In eighteen months, the saleo of this organization amounted to nearly two and a halt million dollars. The growers received than a million of this amount. More than $1,260,090 tere ceipt are the only qualifications necessary for civil | Service and government administration. | A Strange Spectacle (Pittsburgh Sun) : Growe | For four hours they streamed past hig bier, they | with whom he had lived, they’ who had known him, they who had loved him and they who had feared him. Hundreds upon hundreds they thou- less came, sands upon thousands, some in curiosity, some ia went for operating expenses. ‘This was ‘i : pececeberal pense peas is sorrow, some weeping, some stolid, emotionless, ex more than the growers received for their share. p Fi F Hour after hour they streamed by, Probably other cooperative ventures have had the same experiences. Within certain limits and under especially favorable circumstances cooperative mar keting ventures ‘can ‘be made but member | ship in them must be general and management eff cient and economical While cooperative marketing is better than govern mental interference in distribution of farm prod: ucts, it is not a panacea, Some venture of this kind, especially those operated by the fruit and tobacco growers, have protected the market ang secured for the grower a better price, yet there are hundreds of loosely organized cooperative units which have lost | money for the farmer. In many instances he would | have been better off to have taken his chances in dividually in the general market ‘False economic doctrine preached by the politi- cians and theorists have arrayed the farmer against | the business man. That antagonism is abating. Farm- ers who come in contact with cooperative market | ing ventures have had their eyes opened. They} witness the process of distribution in its various phages and see how expensive and complex it is. In Minnesota at least the growers find that it ts | more to get the potato from the farm into the hand of the ultimate consumer than it does to raise it. Cooperation affords some relief to the farmer if the organizations whi market his goods are efficiently manned. Unfortunately the individual farmer cannot give the organization to which he trusts his product the supervision and attention that the commission man or broker gives his own icipeas. span the Missouri at Kansas City there will be au (Many items of expense enter into the marketing|¢normous gain in motor traffic. This movement of farm products which a farmer may not realize | Will be of mutual benefit to Clay and Jackson cour until he pays the various bills through his coopera-|ties. It will involve not merely an expansion of tive venture. Farmers who have gained this ex-|the tourist business in Western Missouri. It will perience are not inclined to be as hostile toward the Pring a new intercounty traffic that witl be of ad- while the police jostled them into line, and the mov ing picture cameras reeled off film. It was not the body of a benevolent philanthro- pist, nor of a beloved priest or minister or bbi, nov }of a patriarch physician who had brought their babies into the world and spirited them back to! health and strength when they lay ill, nor a political leader who had inspired them with great ideals and high aspirations. | *The funeral was that of a lower, East side gang leader. ~ His body had been found in a blazing motor ca His hands had been tied beh'nd his back, his teeth | knocked out, his nose broken, and five bullet wouns: were counted by the police surgeon. So detectives mingled with the mourning and th? sightseers, to learn—if they could—who his killers were. to pay o Fi With Tolls Abolished (Kansas City Star) ~ Kansas City has had a striking ilustration of the way in which traffic expands on a thoroughfare | when tolls dre abolished. As Walter Negbauer pointed out in the “get-together” picnic last week where the free bridge was discussed, the intercity viaduct as a toll bridge received little patronage. With the removal of tolls the traffic has reached a point where it is necessary to add a lower deci for trucks and to widen the upper roadway. Gnce a roomy free bridge for motors is built’ to | jewels and that he had no knowledge of where| leave for Europe next week and re- That the captured ¢ not the one man who was me bi to find iled to find them, she they had been secreted. Consequent- ly the police think the man wko dropped the jewels is one of the men who are now in prison, They think that the man decided to doublecross them knows anything about the Pre: ‘ott imme seat ely the nee to the safety deposit vault, and she intimates that it will be a long time before she will wear it again, if she does. The Prescott pearls ‘have come to almost as fateful as the Hope mond, and it would not be surprising if Mrs. Preseoti yin disposed of th “If it were possible for me to get away from my business,” said Mr. Prescott to the reporter, “I would main an indefinite time. Mrs. Pres- cott’s mother is over there, and she nxious to have her daughter but of course my wife would not leave me for a long visit. “Anyway,” he continued, “you the fact that Mrs. Prescott’s pearls, if they ure stolen n the future, will have to be taken from a safety deposit vault, as nov consent will my wife wear gain, Ever since she has had | them, and especially since her jewels have been augmented by her sis ter's pearls, they have been « source of great trouble and anxiety to her. They are not worth the grief they | have caused. Poor little Miss Elli | ton’s death can be directly to them, and all the pearls in the world are not worth one human life.” New York, Sept. 23—Your New Yorker has grown so accustomed to the carryings-on of hold-up men| and bur that he does not read the daily accounts of them in the papers unless they include the inter- esting detail of a murder or two, Hardly passes but what the polige capture a yegg they have been seeking for months. Thus it would} seem that crime would abate consid-| erably, but it doesn't. The genius di: crooked gentry is other day the police report tells of two bandits which crowded a pay- master’s machine to the curb and leaped to it from their own car while both =machines_ wer traveling 40 They seized the pay on in their victim's ci d by the amazing. The own. Leaping into their own they escaped. | On the same day the police re ported’ the capture of a man who had committed 50. house-breakings without being trapped. He would carry a brace-and-bit with him and bore through doors until he could crash in the panel and unlock the door from the inside. He was caught when he dropped the brace-and-bit while walking on the street. « I do not. know whether there are more robberies in proportion to pop- ulation in New York than in other whether my observation but on the surface there seems te be more robberies, murders, assaults and other major crimes taking place around here at present than has heen the case in months. Within the past week the tong war has been is correct, ay American Legion had a parade -in New York where many had forgot- ten the war © now and then, ot for wrist watches New York's a great city. Has just about every kind of trouble in the world except forest fires. These forest worse. in the wo permitte fires Maybe the game limit the campers to wardens are growing They should tack up signs ing “No forest fires could starting “one small forest fire per day. Talk about fall styles, And seanty dresses. The wears the warmer she less a looks. But marry one of these warm sis- ters. can keep her in the refrigerator, shot a . bandit. Then tell her your pay. You kitchen for a It's a quaint old custom which may nev- er be revived, French think they have a way to callect from Russia. So do those Russians. We doubt it. One nice thing about being a man is you don't have to get mad now and then and wish you were a man. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Ine.) EVERETT TRUE H Se) lig Mies, CA cities, but certainly there are far more in number. And I am not thinking now of cover charges. And by the way, there are more crimes committed, in a theatrical way, on Broadway at this time than at any other. Producers make a drive to put over a show early in the season so that if it proves a success it will have a long ‘run. So far this has resulted in great business for the cut-rate ticket agencies, Only two plays so far have beer able to keep their tickets out of the half- price list. Why does crime increase with the middleman as those who know nothing of the toll | Vantage to both counties, | sega coming of autumn? I do not know BY CONDO —AND NOTHING, MR, TRUG, 13 MoRe {PATENT, TO SVEN THE LEAST OBSERVING, THAN THAT THIS CIFE 1S A POIGNANT TRAGEDY, THE FAGRIC OF WHICH PAIN AND SORROW ARE THE WARP AND WOOF. |! BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING | Surgeon General, United States Pub- | “lie Health Service Scarlet fever is a very contagious disease, easy to catch, but not so easy to cure. When the disease is mild it is, sometimes ‘called scarlet rash, but is none the less scarlet fever. The incubation period is from two to four days, Scarlet fever begins with head- ache, vomiting, faintness and occa- sional convulsions, especially in chil- dren. | ‘The child suddenly feels tired, list- less and out of sorts. The mouth and throat are deeply congested. There is pain on swallowing or talk- ing. The skin is very dry and hot. ‘The tongue is furred and under this white covering is red and swol- len. The inflammation may extend from the throat to the ears. The glands of the neck often become swollen. In ordinary cases these ear- ly signs are followed in a day or two by a rash. In mild cases this rash may be first symptoms noticed. Little red points close together appear, first on the neck and chest. These soon spread over most of the body. This rash is very brilliant in color. After four‘or five days the skin begins to shed. Sometimes it is cast off in large flakes. Inflammation of many organs of the body may follow scarlet fever. There may be pneumonia, pleurisy, ulceration of the throat, abscess in the neck and inflammation of the lining membrane of the heart. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1925 —FABLES ON HEALTH SERIOUS COMPLICATIONS MAY FOLLOW ATTACK hind the ear. If this abscess is not opened it may produce serious (fatal) disease of the brain. Mild cases of scarlet fever may not be recognized until some un- usual occurrence’ such as a swelling in the neck, the shedding of skin, the onset of nephritis is noted. The rash may be absent or present on only a portion of the body. The mild form may give rise to a severe attack in another person. In a severe case there may be high fever, delirium, coma, gangrene of the thro&t with a foul discharge from the nose and mouth. In these cases the patient usually dies with- in a few days. Proper Care Necessary You should know that death from scarlet fever is infrequent in cases that receive proper care and atten- tion, although many children suc- cumb to the complications produced by scarlet fever and it is often the starting point of chronic disease of the head, ears and kidneys which latter may cause death in later life. It is more fatal to children under six years of age. Persons suffering from scarlet fever should be isolated and should not be allowed to communicate with other people as long as there are any discharges from the mouth, throat, ears or other parts of the body. The person caring for the pa- tient should not mingle with other persons and all dishes should be scalded before being wgain used. The patient should have his own dishes, spoons, knives and forks. Nephritis or inflammation of the kidneys frequently occurs in the sec- ond to the fourth week. Dangers of Complications In this complication puffiness is noticeable under the eyes, the hands and ankles swell, sometimes there is general drops: There may be convulsions and the case may quickly end in death. In other cases the person either recov- ers entirely or complications may de- velop, be There may be pain, swelling and redness of the joints. Careful watch should be kept in cases of scarlet fever for symptoms of inflammation of the middle ear. These symptoms are pain ‘in the ear, a tenderness over the bony prominence behind the ear, and drowsiness, The patient may moan in sleep and be hard to arouse. If the drum membrane breaks the pus escapes from the ear opening and if the inflammation is mild the symptoms abate, otherwise an ab- seess may form in the bony cells be- These dishes should be sterilized by washing in scalding water. All cloth- ing worn by the patient should be disinfected. Milk bottles should be sterilized before being returned to the milk man. These precautions should be taken in the mildest cases. The most careful supervision by a doctor is essential in scarlet fever. Remember These Points Preventive measures: 1, Children who have had scarlet fever must not return to school for at least six weeks. 2. Children whose skin is peeling or whose nose or ear is discharging still have scarlet fever. 3. Treatment by a doctor is es- sential. The heart, kidneys and ears are most seriously affected by scar- let fever and great care of the pa- tient should be taken. 4. You should follow implicitly the doctor's directions and instruc tions as to food and clothing. 5. Careful nursing should be con- tinued after the skin has peeled and the patient is apparently well. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON THE LAST OF TICK TOCK “Why, did you say that old clock on the kitchen wall took a thousand men to make?’ asked Nick, “Ive seen men in jewelry stores fix uv clocks and I think one man coutd make one.” Tick Tock, the little clock fairy, laughed. “I just knew that was what you were thinking,” he said. “Yes, after all the material was given to him, perhaps he could,” said Tick Tock, “But it takes men to make material, or even to find it, The works of a clock have all sorts of minerals in them that must be mined and worked and purified be- fore a watchmaker or a clockmaker can use them at all. Copper, steel brass, and lead all have a place a clock. Even gold and silver some clocks—and jewels. “The porcelain or enamel in the dial is made of fine baked clay that takes mining and preparing and all sorts of things before it becomes a clock face. Then there is the glass, and the wood in the case, the oils to make it go, and so forth. The best clock oil is made from black fish which are very hard to find and hard to catch. More men again! Yes, it takes a thousand men to make the plainest clock, my dears. Ships, trains, mines, furnaces, and a great deal of skill with it all. Clocks are wonderful things.” “We have had a fine time on our adventure,” said Nancy, “and we have learned a lot, haven’t we, Nick. I'm sure we are ever and ever so much obliged.” “You're welcome,” said Tick ‘Tock heartily. “There are still more clocks in the world that you have not seen, but time was too short to show you everything. I know of one clock in achurch that has such beautiful chimes, a man at ‘the organ inside the church can sit down and play any tune he wishes on them, on the chimes, I mean, and they can be heard for miles, That is Trinity Church in New York. And because those chimes ate so sweet und so famous, jewelers copy them in smaller, clocks, that is, in house clocks. Many people who have chi clocks in their houses do not know that they are hearing, every hour and quarter hour, and half hour, the very same chimes that ring out in Trinity Tower at the same minute.” “That. js very interesting,” said Nick. “My, you know q lot, Tick Tock.” \ “And I know of another clock, not so large,’ id Tick Tock, “that was made in Spain about the time Colum- bus discovered America. It is made of silver and looks like a music box, for underneath the clock works is a zither. On the hour it plays one tune and on the half hour another. It only has two tunes; but they are quite long. |» pe “But there, my dears, the sun is coming up.and I promised the Fairy Queen that. I would. have you back in bed long before morning. You will be very tired when your mother comes in to waken you.” “Qh, no!” said Nigk. “We never get tired in the magic shoe: “Well, good-night, then,” said the | little fairy. “Here we are right in your room where I-found you. Try to remember some of the things I have told you and we'll go on an- other adventure some day.” The fairy took-the magic shoes and \ in gathered up his keys and oil-can and tools and jumped to the hearth. He peeped up the chimney and the next instant he was gone! » (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) a at | A THOUGHT | Helaiiigalticiaviing a Ye fathers, provoke not your chil- dren to wrath.—Eph. 6:4. It is not the anger of the father but his silence that the well-bred son dreads.—Chinese proverb. Special prayers recently were of- fered in Durango, Mexico, for relief from the scorpion pest. You CAN HAVE Your FILPIS DEVELOPED BUT ONCE FINNEY'S DAILY PHOTO SERVICE BISMARCK Lo September 30 $6570 Seattle-Tacoma "Double Daily West Service “The North Coast Limited” One of America’s Fine Trains Let me plan your trip W. A. McDonald, Agent Bismarck, N. D,

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