The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 2, 1925, Page 4

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RAC yaks PAGE FOUR - $ 3 leon ained in one beautiful cabinet that makes an’ The Bismarck Tribune °":"" Peet at eeblarh tne ees — jaan piece of furniture. But radio development is far from perfection ‘itis almost certain that still more amazing changes will be made An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| It may be only a short time until the music ot Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at the famous cathedrals of Europe or the sing-sons Bismarck, ag sccond class mail matter. | melodies of the orient will be heard by the Kan 5 Mann .. President and Publisher | z aah eevee D. Man Prosident_and Publleher | carmer whenever he wish Payable in Advance ve s to turn on the radio. Subscription Rates Dally by carrier, per errn 20 The Elks’ Band Benefit Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).......- 7.20 pa . ae Daily by mail, per year Bismarck B. P.O. E. will bring May Robson to . 6.00 the city (in state outside Bismarck). . . . 6.00 Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota... Member Audit Bureau of Clreulation ae i Member of The Assoclated Press The Elks deserve the whole he The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the the city in this drive for fund It use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also i : the local news of spontaneous origin published here. /Olers excellent entertainment at_ no cost to Bis in. All rights of republication of all uther matter | marck residents. The name of May Robson, a vet herein are a served, Forelgn Representatives : 7 a LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | Highest commendation goes to Bismarck Elks for CHICAGO DETROIT their work in civic development. The Elks gave Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | Bismarck the municipal swimming pool, Here PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH i W YORK - : Fifth Ave, Bldg. ; auditorium October ay, “Helena's * Band Proceeds will support of 1 painless way of extr evening for city play-goers ppreciation of this great public-spirited organi paper) | zation. The Elks should expect a full house at the auditorium next Tuesday night (Officlal City, State and County } tion of Wednesday's specitl Royalty atorelect Robert Very conclusive election in Wisconsin, M. La Follette carried 70 Although the thrones of some of the remaining tities in the | monarchs in the world may be none too secure, the vone indetinitely all hope for a political | peyay princess state, p realignment in the La FB elte stronghold within | ter the near future. ‘The demoralizing defeat of the | por the people of lands ruled by royalty seem to right wing of the G. O. P. is doubly significant iM | jave forgotten completely the old theory that a that it for agts continued victories for prog sive) prince torces in the primaries and elections i love The strategy of Coolidge Republicans in the re | Possibly the war with its infusion of democratic cent contest was to capture the seat in the Senate | ide vacated by the death of the late Robert M. La Fol | sta lette, dead progressive chieftain into Europe is to blame, but Italy, for in Princess Ma falda married a man she loved, instead of a future ems far more pleased Having accomplished that objective, the regalar | king of some state that she didn't love. i Even almost insurmountable re ©. P. forces would be in a good position to r ‘ were overcome, True love seems to be democrat elect Senator Irvine E. Lenroot and capture th | | ing royalty. movecnorship next. y The progr ive plan of battle hinged on the} election of Young Bob to sucesed his father in the Senate. Governor John J. Blaine, elected to three terms as executive. would make the race for the ate in 1 and) Attorney General Herman Ekern would be Blaine's running mate in the coi® | test for governor, Both Blaine and Ekern arc skilled politicians who have strong personal follow ings in Wi 1. Wkern is an able I frequently referred to as the “brai ve movement with the death Boll site. ing opponent, Mr, Dithmar. The fate of the G0. P. in Wisconsin is at a crisis | Anat is a pretty sma With scarcely a year to prepare for the 1926 cam: | came a "| Wisconsin's politica paign, Coolidge Republicans are demoralized and iv full rout. On the other hand, the progressive party reinforced by Wednesday's landslide victory, looks forward with full confidence to victory Maries and at the polls next year. While the situation is critical, the Republican is far from dost in Wisconsin. It is probably true that G. 0. P. forces have a more favorable chance to crush La Follette next year than in th special Senatorial elections. The death of the elder La Follette found Coolidge Republicans to tally unprepared to wage a Senatorial The advantage lay entirely with the other The significance of Wednesday's election was not the G. O. P. defeat but the magnitude of that de Editorial Comment | Wis consin, a Political Anomaly (Duluth Lerald) cone | senator from Wisconsin, succeeding the late Robert er, and is | Marion La Follette, St. He won b a vote that is of the pro | f the elder Let hing victory, and it leav state of mind pretty definite. La Folletteism has survived La Follette. There is enough vitality in it yet, though its ator, builder | and leader hag gone, to give the younger La Fuilette at the pri-| A as sweeping a victory a: It is true that the vote en was light, something less caus of those who stayed away from the polls could be probably not. Probably i i different. ; And anyway, analy won't important election terprise. in progress Republicans will be better organized in the 19: campaign. They unite solidly behind Senator Lenroot, who will make a strong ernor Blaine. Lack of harmony in G. 0. F during the recent campaign was all too evident. remains for the Republicans to look around care fully for an opponent equal to Attorney General Ekern in the gubernatorial race. In spite of the admitted strength of the Blaine Ekern combination, Coolidge Republicans, by organizing an effective campaign, can turn the tide in the Badger stat More teamwork, more leadership, and hard work | e nec It can be done. Now is the time to | act. With a’ year in which to perfect its organiza- | tion, the GO. P. can profit by mistakes of the last | campaign, sand, or a castle out of Wisconsin, plainly, Follette represents—whatever, pre be. And of course Wi this being a free country, to vote for and get wha it wants. It I politically. foam. ace against Gov circles: election to qualify, and he had to run as an ind pendent. It has no Republican party, for La Follette, man 8 last year, got the Republican nomination and now goes to the senate more or legs proudly bearing a ; Republican abel. The French Debt Settlement It has a Socialist party, but it seems to be only 4 The tempor: ettlement of the French war debt. | shell. The Socialist candidate, though he was the covering a five-year period on the basis of annual only correctly labeled candidate in the field, was payments at the rate of $40,000,000, will meet wita only a shadow in the contest, getting only about a the entire approval of the American nation. The dozen thousand votes altogether. ’ agreement has the double advantage of providing | Wisconsin has for years been just plain La Fol for payment of this great loan, totaling $4,000,000,000, lette territory. Now, with the man who made it so and at the same time leaving to a future date final , gone, and only a young son to bear hig banner, it settlement of the account until it is possible to | remains what it was—just plain La Follette terri- arrive at more accurate conclusions as to the finan- | tory, a political atmosphere utterly detached from cial ability of France to meet this gigantic obligation. | the rest of the country and with utterly no relation Secretary Mellon in arranging a settlement of | to the political minds and conditions of the rest of the French debt wants to be to the people of | the states. the United States, who will in the long run pay But that is the way Wisconsin wants it to be any remission or concessi in payment of this |and, this being a free country, Wisconsin has a debt, and to the taxps who will bear | perfect right to have it as it wants it to be. the burden of meeting the obligation. wo In arranging the funding of the French debt, the The Farmer Works United States has no desire to be mercenary or (South Bend Tribune) greedy. It is unthinkable to believe that France In the picturesque struggle between the indi- would accuse this government of mater m i” | vidual and the corporation for industrial supremacy demanding a prompt settlement of this $4,000,000,000 | the farmer is one of the few of the former class obligation. Had this country desired to be grasp | who is succesfully standing his ground. Organized ing, it could have demanded terms of settlement | enterprise, the modern economic giant, has swa!- when the money was advanced to France at a tim» | jowed whole many individual manufacturers and when any terms would have been acceptable. It iS | otner producers but the farmer has demonstrate! apparent that Washington has shown great for | that he is more than its equal. bearance in negotiations with the French. It is the ‘The idea that the farmer is a slip-shod business desire of the American people to be as lenient with | man is a delusion, according to W. 1. Myers, profes our neighbor as is consistent with our own best in | sor of farm finances of Cornell university. The terests. This fact ig the outstanding feature of the | american farmer, he says, ip the most efficient food recent negotiations. producer that the world has ever known. The de- ' crease in the proportion of workers’ engaged in ag- Radio riculture from 87 per cent in 1820 to 26 per cent in “| never thought I would live to coax a grand 1920 is a concrete expression of this efficiency. In organ recital out of something. about twice ag large ; as a cigar box,” says George Ade. engaged in agriculture American farmers produce That sentence well expresses the amazing de- enough food for the nation and a large syrplus for velopment of radio in this country during the last | ¢*Port. : ‘ few years. It igs typical of the way American bus: This is one reason why the corporation, which ness develops something the public wants, has made individual enterprise a practical impos- At first it was necessary to string wires on ton | sibility in many industrial flelds, has never been of your home, fool around with three ér four dials able to overcome the farmer, who is more efficient. and have unsightly batteries, wires and loud speak- than the large-scale producer. , Perhaps the great- ers in your home. est single reason for this showing by the farmer But the newest sets have no aerial, no batteries, | 18 that on the farm the proprietor and his family Lancwistble or invisible, one dial control and everything work as hard as or harder than the employes. to give a perform | ng money for maintaining the band, which | eran favorite of the stage, assures an enjoyable | opportunity for the city to show its very real, of today are more fortunate than} s should marry for diplomacy and not for} igious ibarriers | | +: The Tangle :: | ' LETTER FROM L Robert Marion La Follette, Jr. is United States | twice as great as that of all his four opponents put 1, together, and two and a half times that of his lead: | ni j 1] must ask you not to visit the chil- | whenever I ple his father could have won.! than half a vote, and it might be that if the minds | analyzed a different condition would develop. But all the voters had gone! or three times she had nearly broken| | to the polls the outcome would not have been muci i UP % the mind of a citizen who : ke the trouble to get out to vote when an, '*% isn't a hopeful en- | sta ; F .| sure that he will dome.’ It is too much like trying to build a house out of | Prescott tha ord is not lan rived hee ants what- young Mr. La | Prescott that my word is not law in| formed her ely, that may onsin has a perfect right, paves Wisconsin in an interesting situation | It has no Democratic party, for its Democratic | candidate couldn't get enough votes in the primary ager of an anti-Republican presidential ticket only jhe mad | selves. spite of this decrease in the proportion of workers THE BISMARCK TRIBUN: Comes a Time in the Lives of All Parents DOGGONE I, FOLKS! - ICANT” Be ep To Your APRON STRINGS 2\ | BEnrnesowue now av : SH!- GROWN UP AI Tis TINE | WAS SIRIKIN' OUT For NYSELE - = YOU FOLKS IS. K: HAMSIRINGIN' KY PROGRESS TE PRES-| “I'm going out for a ride cone TO THE LEtt A Mrs. Prescott. I've — ordere QUISE, CARE OF DRAWER—CC answered “We must di you cannot ke: Th Atherton. nd’s cot acridly. r his mothe . hu well satisfied with Han- I * Lanswered. “So much so that dren in the future except when Iam! neither of 2 present.” When we e: town car Ww: “Where's the Mrs. Prescott{ | Ho, hum! ordered?” I asked. living in a said anything turther.| New York. ie, do T hear a there. refusing to le vou T will not st never as yet interfere fairs at ail, but now 1 cannot be silent “Did and see my own flesh and blood in} Mrs, danger of having his life ruined.” T had to smile, Little Marquise, be-! ; fe cause 1 thought ot the interiering| “Did you tell her this?” she had done in the past, when two| “Yes, "Ma Toad Mrs.} ing” word. my famil Why did you not bring it, then? mean exactly what TF have told “Because, when I told; you,” I told John's mother. “You| her she did not s nything, just must stay away from the nursery un-| turned and left dT supposed Tam ther F she didn’t want to Ko. shail ask my son if this order] ” T turned to Mrs, Prescott ds, and a nave told him 2ll] “Will you use the coupe? of this disgrac m quite] “fT thought he was lying to me, pnior. “AIL right, do “but until you I interrunted,| she said furiously n persuade Jack] “My servants do not “If th y do this house, I must insist that youl not stay with me. 1 order ; 16 not go into the nursery unless] the coupe?” stay. you have vitation to go and I “Not today. I shall forego my $ been spoiled anyway. you please,” I t into my 1 in an hour. Being br But there ii red saying: ‘The Prescot that name ear is ready, Both women ed for the stair every day. After his facial treat- ments he goes to a mirror and v carefully applies rgitge to his cheeks carmine to his lipe and mascarra to his eyelashes and brows. And this with the possible ex New York, Oct. grace of Broadway of humo: 3 inherent in its s ing crowds its individual once met fellow who had saving sense Se] Aw Amer 1| Mars has back ninety thousand W. DEAN. | pi | Serres General, United States Pub- that chicken forms one of the early {than any other animal food. Fur-| right, I'm taking the} Nothing makes i telling her you ki: to the train to mect my friend; She expected it. girl madder than ed her because | sn’t that a good deal to do for] And few thing 1 ag p are asked| der than not kissing her when she never | knows you know you could. ‘and I. grinned, but! _ They jailed 600 more Chinese in Looks like a hard win- lat the door, the| ter for the Sing Sing rats. The nice thing about Mr. Prescott teuk it this morn-) S° liable to be out of work. more weeks you will you not understand that} ,, Before many enchantment find just how m, but the car was not distance added In Berlin, the women are usurp- Doesn't matter. We just wanted to use that “usurp- ing smoking FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1295 BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING lic Health Service CHICKEN OR SQUAB IDEAL FOOD WHEN ILL SAYS EGGS ARE CONCENTRATED FOOD You should know that eggs are Those of you who have had exper-| concentrated food; that the average jience with sickness probably know] egg ‘contains about 32 calories of protein and 68 calories of fucl and items in the menu of the convales-| other values. cent. Whether eggs are eaten raw, There is a reason for tiis. A great| poached, boiled for a long time, soft portion of the chicken is actually| boiled, or scrambled, they are, it digested and taken up as food by| would appear, completely digested. the cells of the body. Furthermore,; Whipped raw eggs, such as are used chicken is easily digested. Fi gestion, or an appetite that needs encouraging, a young pigeon or a squab may be prescribed as a deli- cacy. Squab is, of course, expensive, but it is certainly easy to eat and is as} easily assimilated. You should know that adult pig- eons which have been well fattened, and have not been allowed to fly, are almost as palatable as squab ‘and usually can be purchased for much Jess than squab. Eggs are probably the most gen- erally used food of animal origin. It is estimated that eggs furnish near- ly 6 per cent of man’s protein, and at least 3 per cent of his daily ra- tion. Eggs are less liable to convey di ease or contain harmful properties thermore, there is no infection known at the present time that can be transmitted from the hen to man through the egg. Of course, this does not mean that bacteria may not be transferred to an egg. A dirty eggshell may con- taminate an egg, and stale eggs may cause serious trouble, from poison- ous products like ptomaine. in milkshakes and liquid diets, are those who have a delicate di-| digested by the stomach in less than half the time req ed to digest a fried or hard-boiled egg. ‘ Because they are a heavy nitro- genous food, eggs should be eaten sparingly. The yolks of eggs beaten up with orange juice may be given to those who are anemic or emaciated. Large amounts of egg tax the liver with too much nitrogen. WHEN EGGS ARE FRESH Fresh eggs direct from the hen- nery are dull, not shiny. . When an egg is stale evaporation has taken place. Some of the water in its composi- tion has passed through the porous shell and air has taken its place. Stale eggs are, therefore, lighter than fresh eggs. Test your eggs first by putting them in a deep pan of water, This water test will tell you three things. . First, if the eggs are fresh their weight will cause them to sink. Second, if the eggs are stale they will slant away from the bottom of the pan, or will even stand on end. Third, if the eggs are bad they will float. It is, of course, no news to us Americans that we are the center of the world. We have always been the center. In fact, the home town of each of us has always been the Center of the country and of the world, and h one individually has been the center of that town. Human nature is thav way. But, getting up on the mountain top and surveying the world im- personally, is an exceedingly new thing. Ten years ago, Europe was as little concerned with us as we with Europe, The history of our world had taken place mostly in Europe, and the center of most things was still there. We were a great, new, crude peo- ple, interesting in our sheer bigness and in our childish pride in it. The “certain condescension in foreign- ers” still applied to us, and some of us still, had inferiority complex enough to accept i Not now.” We may be unpopular and misunderstood, but we are nev- er ignored, What we do or think about things is more considered than what any-! one else does, We have become the ¢ bobbed her ‘h se she didn't bob it. London has just completed largest reservoir in the world, so her that he didn’t want to take me out,”] S2@P makers should be happy. Aviator flew more than 300 miles At rate he could leave almost minded is all right. a danger. Broad streams usually are very St cs show autos kill two peo- ple every hout in the United States and your hour may come, Life is made things which must be counted on. +] (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) PIRAL DANGEROUS FISH bozo has. caused more feminine) Buenos Aires—Reports hearts to flutter than any other idol| the dreaded fish, pirai, is more com- ption of Valen-| mon in South American river wa- tino. ters this year than, ever before. The ai is not a large fish, but it pos- sibly is the most dangerous of the tist claims that! finny tribe. The fish travel in shoals. extending! They have fearful teeth and a pas-|‘ sion for blood. worked hard and ed the money d producer. He was standing in front just been produced and where it was just about to die. Tickets for the, EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO of the theater where his show had 1 WANT TO CET TOME PAPER LUN show were going begging in Joe LeBlang’s half-price gency. When 1 started to sympathize the young producer he laughe said, “Well, I got my name in the pa- pers an ie And now with the ensorship. of — pl bly abated, the Shuberts are announcing a “sex appeal” contest between mem- bers of the “Gay Paree”™ and “Art- ists and Models.” And then there is a grav-haired woman who came here from Dubuque several y so and each week sie buys a copy of “The New Yorker,” which proudly announces itself as “not edited for the old lady from Dubuque.” itors and contribu- tors of “The New Yorker” kid them- Most of them are only a generation, or less, removed from the farm ully ninety per cent of the wisecrackers of Broadway are not native to the city. There are alwa midgets pla at some theater or other in York. Only occasionally are they to be seen eating at restaurants around town, That is because a restaurant on Forty-seventh street installed a set of hich chairs espe- cially for their benefit and the mid- gets patronize that restaurant al- most exclusively. To one who sees life as it is lived on Broadway day in and day out over a period of years the most amazing development is the growth of effemi- Macy among its men. One curly- for ing w AWAY SUCH CHESTNUTS and who is again coming into popu- larity, has had several permanent financial and industrial center of the world, and are potentially its chief political and military f: Tr. If we are idealistic, as we were “No, he couldn't do that,” said Daddy thoughtfully. “Why not?” asked Grubby. “Because there is no window,” said Daddy with a twinkle in his eye. “I built my garage that way on purpose.” “Maybe someone climbed in thi kitchen window aand got the ke j said Prickles Porcupine. “Maybe he did,” laughed Daddy. “But we know it wasn't you, Prick- les, because you would leave some of your spikes behind and that would give you away.” Prickles sighed. “Yes, it's aw- ful,” he said. “I can’t even get a spoonful of jam _ without Polly knowing it. It’s worse than having thumb prints, so it is.” “Well, all this talking isn't go- ine to get your gasoline back,” said Nick. “What are we going to do about it?” “['ll have to get some more, that’s "said Daddy good nataredly. lere's another fifteen cents, Nick. ve me two pints. That will take me to the Post Office and back and leave enough for tomorrow.” “What are you going to do to- morrow’ asked Ringtail ‘Coon, who didn’t have a long, sharp nose for nothing. It was always’ pok- into other peple's affairs. e're going over to get my mother to bring her to our house for a visit,” said Daddy. “The children will all be in Helter Skelter School soon and the house will be so quiet, we want someone around to sort’ of be company. We're having a regular house-clean- ing. For ‘old Mrs. Gray Tail is very particular and she gets into all the corners when she comes.” “Is that why you like to stay out- during and immediately following the war, the whole world rises to vur inspiration. | If we suffer u sordid reaction, as we are doing. so does the world. | we will wear Paris fashions, they are the world’s style. If we refuse, Paris changes them, —No- body likes us—great success is never | loved—but everybody reckons with us. It is a new experience, to be thus taken at what had always been our own valuation. | We are the center of things in time, as well as in space and in im- portance. That, too, is always hu- man nature. Time consists of past, present and future, and its center’ is whatever instant we happen to be living, | But, just to be more self-centered, consider some of the reasons why we will be also a center of attention a thousand years from now. Life became human with two in- ventions—fire and stone tools. Then for countless ages man roamed the world with no change beyond slight improvements in those tools and the things made with them. Then came a few thousand jears of bronze and a few hundred of iron, Then one more major invention, the alphabet, and intellectual and’ social progress began. Several thousands of years of ups and downs, and finally two more major inventions—gunpowder and! the printing press. Then, for the first time, the world speeded up. And then the steam engine, the railroad, the telegraph, the. telephone, electric light and; motor, the bicycle, the automobile, the airplane, and the radio. “eR. TRUG, WE DON'T ~ KEEP ‘EM, land i haven't run ten yards since.| CTT waves.* Insofar as I know this is his only lady-like habit. But there is another notable of screen and stage, ‘a man who was probably the country’s greatest ma- tinee idol long before the word “sheik” came into its present mean- ing and who more lately has ap- peared on the screen as a he-man hero and whose love affairs have em- blazoned many front pages. This| _. fellow vi a beauty parlor ainkont S A long list, but nearly all of it with its social and intellectaul con- sequences, almost in the last second of the last minute of the last: hour} of man’s day on earth, Whatever may happen in the fu- ture, to transform the external or the | internal life of man, he will have to look back on these few generations as having made more changes than a hundred ages, before. Fy pee ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON What do you suppose has hap-) pened?” cried Daddy Cracknuts in surprise, when Nick opened mi gasoline, tank in the squirrel gen- tleman’s’ car and found that the gasoline was all gone. “I just had it filled up last night’ I got, two whole pints and paid fi teen cents for it.” “Somebody must have stolen it,” said Mister Bunny with a wise nod: of his head, “It happens that way sometime “Yes, it does,” spoke up Grubby Woodchuck ‘quickly. “I had some| stolen one time. “So did I, said Prickles Porcu-| pine. “I remember the time th: But Daddy Cracknuts interrupte “I suppose it must have happened, but it is very mysterious. I got the pescline last thing last night before |: went to bed, and I took the car right into my garage and locked the door after me. Then I hung the key on the nail behind the stove in the kitchen.” . “Maybe the thief climbed in through the: window,” said Grubby Woodchuck. i doors?” laughed Ringtail *Coon. (“I don't blame you. 1 can't bear house-cleaning, either.” “I tell you what we'll do, Daddy,” said Mister Bunny just then. “Maybe the thief will come back tonight to steal some more of your gasoline. Some of us will take turns sitting up to watch.” “Well, I declare,” said Daddy. “That’s’ very kind, I'm sure. It would be a very good idea and I'll let you know about it after supper. Ul have to be going to the Post Office now to see if there is a post- al from my wife's mother. Good- bye, everybody.” And away he went. (To be Continued.) (Copyright 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids for the stuccoing of the outside walls of the Detention Hospital Building will be received by the Board of City Commissioners of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, until eight o'clock P. M., October 5th, 1925. The work contemplated in: cludes the cleaning of the brick walls, the covering of the same with metal lath and the application of stucco. Bids are to be made upon the basis of furnishing all labor and materials necessary for the work. Plans and specifications are on file with the City Auditor. Each bid shall be accompanied by a certified check for Fifty Dollars ($50.00) payable to the order of A. P. Lenhart, President of the Board of City Commissioners, as a guar- antee that the bidders will, if suc- cessful, enter into a contract for the Performance of the work and fur- nish satisfactory bond therefor. The work shall be completed not later than November Ist, 1925. sche: Hoerd of UF Commissioners es the ri c aoe rigl 0 reject any or By Order of the Board of City Commissioners. M. H. ATKINSON, City Auditor. 9-30—10-2 ‘An ailment similar to hay fever can be caused in many people by the odor of certain animals, notably cots, dogs and horses. It’s puppy hound you loves that for a while and then gq to the dogs,

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