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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Establishea 1873) afterward lool down on “inere money” has alway been wealth, ‘The only time wealth is “vulgar” is when it ts ne | If we do ta England by a small part of I what England did to Spain by wealth, our descend Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, the postofiice at Bismarck, Bismarck, G D., and entered at g second ¢lass mall matter. orge D Mann... . ubseription Rates Payable In Advance Dally by carrier, per year... $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bi 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... » 6.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. . + 6.00 lation” “Member A dit Bureau of Cire Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the uge for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontancous origin published here in. All rights of republication of all uther matter herein are also ia Forelgn Representatlyes IOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT G. CHICAGO, Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND §MITH IW YORK : : Fitth Ave, Bldg. swspaper) The Football Season Is Here The curtain goes up thi rnoon on the football season toeypectaney, featur by the inter play und teat hundred of ¢ elevens throughout the intry, has fur} nished the setting for this gre: event, 1 ni in every city and town, readers will avidly sean evening papers for results of the big games yo oman, woman, and chill whe can read will celebrities The vogue of football has developed tremen dously in recent years. During the short two montis season, interest in the pastime is electric Immense stadiums will fail to accommodate mon ster crowds which will turn out to see champion mg perform. Tickets for the major contests will Lat from five to ten times their original value, Perhaps the ity of the most the port is the peculiar thing fact that it about by and large amateur game. Professional football has grown since the war but it has not grown as fast as the college game. Charges of commercial leveled at the game at the close of every Yet nobody believes for an instant that football is a money-making proposition And here you have the explanation the im of football. Awide the de any able bodied athlete with for se popularity rom y of the game brains enough to this questionatst pensed with, can be a sence of materialism public, pass a college examination, and even oftentimes »— the the jer is dis footfall utter ath Ame hat att ets a One other aspect No football enough to have pepole tire of seeing his name sin print. Each year brings a new crop of candidates and new faces in th y prof of the fascinates me the pub lic idol can stay in the game Tons newspapers sion that bids for public Movies, polit the sta laine might learn a lesson from football, TI are few publie figures which ean perennially re eapture the popt imagination, — Even Charlie Chaplin had to abdic interest in him, The loid celebrities who have te when the public lost first are a hundred other cellu met the 0s ame fate. of other “stars” are dead but don't know it, The has-beens are continually cluttering up every field of popular endeavor, Application of the three-year rule to all walks of public life would be a populace reform h the long-suffering public would with joy 1 wh hats unconfin The Price of Wheat Number one dark in Bismarck proximatesy and 13 cen dications nor hern This marks a drop of ap- bushel within two month In wheat sold for $1 yester 24 cents a a bushel during the past month. will to lower levels in the next few days E are cer hammered 11 quotations he for the appears strengthening 30 that and this year fiicient to cover the Canadian export ntine and Australian Reports that Russia is buying heavily, which until recently ed to bolster up wheat prices, in the light of latest pit news would seem to be discredited, planation in the last two months lief at Chi will not be si crop before Al onto the market. Dominion wheat steady decline lie in European di to the be! wheat comes There is another and more obvious explanation for the slump in cereal pric y post grain shipments to terminal ma have the ef fect of cutting grain prices. rvest slump in cereals is annual, With a s rop in the United States this year, however, it will hardly account for the slow but gradual downturn which h marked wheat quotations during the last month, Meanwhile prospects for two dollar wheat in De cember are fading. That wheat will eventually hit the bottom of the present slump and rebound goes without saying. When this time will come is impossbile to predict. It is safe, however, to fore cast no sharp jump in wheat prices for the present Defense ‘An Italian flew from Rome to Tokyo without much difficulty and a party of Japanese flyers made a successful flight across Siberia to Berlin and Lon don. These flights with the round-the-world tour of the American army aviators and.the nearly successful flight of the navy to the Hawaiian Islands clearly show that the national defense of no nation today can be said to be adequate unless its air force ranks among the best. . : Art London papers comment bitterly on recent art sales which threaten to make New York an art cen- ter, by sheer force of money, as against the ancient centers of culture. What right has mere money, gained by the luck of war, to shift the center of i gravity of art and culture also? It {s a common complaint, but a forgetful one. The galleries, and even the great homes of Eng- land, are full of masterpieces of Italian, Spanish | Z By } and Flemish art. How did they get them? money, and the fortunes of war, in former genera- ‘tions. The foundation of every aristocracy, of every art _ movement’ or collection, of all the things which Kreage Bldg.! Janty may be the ones to despise the vulgarity of some later people rich enough to do ame thins toons -President and Publisher | Gambling \ | One of the oldest and most overworked swindle | games in the world is that of the ‘Spanish \ oner | And yet it is still being hed. Several people in this country have recently received letters from the “pp ner aving he em more than! $100,000, if they will only send a few thousand doi | rs so he can get out of pris | The number of people in this country who have lost their vings through unwise javestment or indie schemes is appalling. ing to make money quickly too often is mie | Land its a poor rule to gamble with everything | vou have, \ The headiine reader sizes up the situation in| Spain by calling ita 1m in someone loot | Editorial Comment , Handcuffed For Life | (Chicago Tribune) | ie pictures Frank D. Michigan and Mr of Representative Edna Scott, in last Sun | | caption, | i i day's Tribune, the copyreader wrote. the ‘Handeuffed for Life." Congressman Scott and hi Wife had just beon refused a divorce by Judge Frank Emerick of Alpena, Mich. Unless the de | cision is. revers a highér court, or the whols| ordid busines one into a in and another court} i {grants the divorcee, the Scotts are bound in marr intil one of them dies, The copyreader's caption wis apt and meaningful. 4 Such a state of union is as immoral as the at | red wets whieh were recited in order to bring! about its dissolution, The Scott divoree suit was | one of the sensational hearings of it kind, Seat! jalleged cruelty and misconduct nd asserted his wife had been indisereet with three men, Mrs. Seott filed a cross bill, charging that her husband drank heavily and gambled for high stakes with ther Washington officals, It was an unpleasant jshow, no worse perhaps than the dirty linen of other folks in’ such cases, but compelling national attention because it involved a representative of he people and others prominent in the capital. The Scotts are mature people, They have learned the bitterness of not bei yle to get on with each | other If there x once real love, it) turned as ‘They have cast at each other the sort of charges that cannot be forgotten or forgi Where jonce was respect and affection, now there is only The together a scorn and‘ hatr > no children to sutte They cannot live ain, yet the law says they must keep on being married. The Scott case is only one of any number of cases which the same situation ex is the fault of the law, which divorce too eas: in Sometimes it for fear of making Y makes it too difficult, and so keep togeth husband and wife who, by all the Jaws of morals, should be The bonds of matrimony are do only when they are willingly put on, willingly worn, and when love and respect form the chain, ; completely divorced. ice Row Stirred Up (Wichita [Kas.] Beacon) When the first installment of the prohibition re port of the Federal Council of Churches came out we predicted that the wets would get considerabl« consolation out of it, and that seems to be the case Reports from nington indicate that it 1 set the dry leaders to fighting among themselv This fact, it is indicated, may be rather damaging to the prohibition cause, On second thought, won't it eventually heip the prohibition cause? | The American people are a great people wher they get mad, some wise man once said. There hasn’t been enough zip in the fight against booze. The good folks have been too complacently good. They have lifted their noses above the mess occa sioned by law violation, particulaly in New York Chicago, and other metropolitan cente! They have not taken enough interest in it. There has veen too much of a spirit of letting George do it. If George is going to do the prohibition job he ix going to need a lot of aggressive help, aside from resolutions and manifestoes. The good folks will have to get down into the dirty and soggy trenches and do some fighting themselves. The wets are jalways fighting. | It is true that the wets have been shouting with {glee since the frankly pessimistic report of the fed eral council came out. That report, in so far as {opinion is concerned, contained too much about prohibition being an “experiment” whose success is doubtful. But possibly the rest of the dry forces need a little disagreeable prod, Perhaps they didn't know just how bad the situation was. There is only one way open, and that is strict enforcement of the law. And the sooner the listless prohibition {element in the country awakens to this fact, gets | uneasy, makes a loud and insistent demand upon government offi and lawmakers, and gets down to actual hard work itself, the sooner the problem will be solved. Our Money on the Nells (St. Louis Post Dispatch) Even in the beauty contest, professionalism raises its ugly head. A small mutiny took place among the amateur beauties at Atlantic City when they found they would have to compete with Kathryn Ray and Dorothy Knapp, professional beauties. 'Those two charmers have withdrawn, and the ama teur beauties once more have the boardwalk tu themselves. If it were a contest in coquetry, the indignation of the amateur beauties wou'd be understandabl: Since the competition was one of beauty alone, th thing is mystifying. We always thought the sim | ple country maiden, with the calico dress and curls | down her back, had’ it all over the incarnadine: chorine. At least, she has in the movies. Has the day come when a brazen creature from the stage can put in the shade our little Nell? Heaven forbid! Too bad this mighty issue was not THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE In All Her Glory WONDERFUL, IN THE SUMMER ‘ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1925 FOOD VITAMINS STILL PUZZLE SCIENTISTS ile wir Youre offen \ LOVELY, INTHE SPRING YOU'RE You're GoRGEOUS, BUT iy Tae AvTum —(\ BOY ] FS WHEN YOU'RE THE | fies BEAUTIFUL OF ALL \ ne | put to the test. Perhaps it will some day. When it does, the Nel's will be the belles, By DR.“HUGH 8. COMMING Surgeon General, United States Pub- lic Health Servie The word = “vitan About 189 a Dutch physician, by the name of Ejkman, in Java, di covered more or less accidental chickens fed on polished rice oped a similar disease. is now too commonly used and reach- er he concluded that this cd the stage where be seen s Probably | duc to the displayed in questionable advertise-| g of the rice which had been ments, which offer articles alleged| Polished, with the removal of its so) outer brown ¢ In other word to contain this wonderful subst ate (or substances) so necessary to our it was the lack health and vi | some sub: n the rice polish- What is a “vitamin,” and what) ings whieh the fowls ill of a does it do? This word is made up| particular disease, oo. of two words: “vi meaning life,| Along with a study of beri-beri, mine,” which is and other “deficiency diseases’ an- other series of experiments hy vari sous workers was carried on, espe- uly in this country, which con- sisted in the feeding of animals on jon used to describe AV TUALM ole ‘Since, purified food stuffs, which theoreti- ever, we do not know the chemical| cally would meet all the require. Composition of these substances and| Ments of nutrition and prowth with nnot show th a failure in any way of “a © in nutrient value, and not only must] C, D, und so on. the bushes. of these experiments to this to support growth and m o far, they have defied chemical body nutrition. | Also, we have | separation in pure form, and they learned the necessity for various | cannot be identified except by phy- mineral salts and other less impor- | siological eftec tant factor: rhey are wide-spread in nature More recently, we have discover-| and occur in a great many articles ed another important fact with re-| of food. yard to the proteins in our diet,! Up to the present time there are This was learned largely through| known about six of these substances animal experimentation, and it was| which ar not-:named, but are let- | found that proteins differ greatly|tered and called “vitamins” A, B, incorrect In other words, its was found that learned that our food| the feeding of animals on what was composed of carbo-hy-| regarded as a well balanced ration, drates or starches, fats and protei did not always’ supply everything collectively termed “organic nutri-| Necessery for nutrition and growth, " We have also learned that Yitamins Hard to Isolate these various components eto ult of these lines of study, he supplied in proper quantities, s finally found that there did both relative and absolute, exist certain’ unidentified accessory * We have learned that part of our! dietary factors, absolutely essential food supply was necessary for the| for nutrition and growth. production of energy, which we These are, called “vitamins.” These have learned to measure in calories,! substances “are absolutely essential a word fami to bo: to man’s diet. They appear all to We h les that some| be alike in being very potent in of these components were nec very small amounts. -- oe Oe eee the body have its proper quant For example: Scurvy is. believed | proteins ach d but that is|to be due to the lack of vitamin | quite fastidious as to the kinds of|C, which is found abundantly in proteins which demands. This! fresh fruit juices, and fresh veg is a fact of very great signi s of many kinds. +, | and perhaps not greatly appreciated. ets is believed to be due to i lished Rice Caused Di the lack of vitamin A, in which cod —————— | blow, one at his purse and the other led to the “vitamin” hy-| liver oil is especially rich. lat his I s? Our first suspicion of the| Beri-beri is thought to be due to ee oe \ W. DE. existence of such substance was de-| the lack of vitamin B, and so on ats : am rived from the study of a disease| through the list. e which is particularly prevalent, and] Not enough is known of them to ee ee nnn ener ER of great importance in the orient,| make very definite statements as known as beri-beri. their exact action and chi | ong people who live| but the fact that such substances, | oy on a rice diet and its dietary| do exist und that they are jbo. tae teed to. hel origin had been suspected for some] lutely necessary to man’s well being, | pirtations ith | rears can ng longer be doubled. le 4 doesn't. worry { . ; e s only thing + We fave established a reason-| Prickles Porcupine arrived and cached the plat that of he world, if they| able degree of order in cities with-' said that although le couldn't do isn t shurehes ot ne P {rar in this| Wt waiting to breed populations | much, a good watcher ! so rethen ete Snvént told: the nimously capable of self-re-| and had and of anyone rsal Christian Conference, at a xq Came, is jhe would grab him. nore that hat we have done between indi-| id Wally Woodchuck and Grub- TH tell her L know a or oe ve must now do between ne, and really everyone i and teil he: you think about SO eee work: and races, or tuke! ame, even the old Owl gent hee” me es. man who ‘lived on the top floor. Vrivately Lo made up my mind to ote pete eat war came on,| ,,The price is the life of eiviliza-| And the frog and turtle from the grent. slots. hy Sully of the impudent manner | oie country were; ton. . brook. 4 whieh [owas answered my the } ede of that coun-! The steps to this end are many.| There were so many people there ane of the sweetest women she had telephone hefare sie aes Cutter tates oe hat coun: The rest. of the world has taken| watehing fer Daddy's burglar, that nown, think likes you Hack. to worehi ping: tribal deities in the {We of them, in the Le Na-| there wasn't anyone left’ to he a walt, hate subtertuges, 1 Mar morshining tril tions and the World é burglar. If there was, I'd like to , quise. 1 would) much 4 ngme Jenova iment, by edu-| have refused to join in the first of | know who he might be. me to Jack with the whole eaelB avert aa | these, but are commi ar as| But one of the Cottontails step- for her to da, but 1 early found Thad to ee atorce peace will}! democra ; in| ped on a dry stick, And~it went e 8 ft) around the bush with him, It d institutions, too, | #dvance of action, to the cond.| off like a pistol shot. and regard one’s bs naw ened to me that 1 could not ae a eee ensy gore! Both parties officially, in conven-| Cracknuts heard it and sat ae ow, tt him dircetly. He would hac been erected for the | tion and in Congress, tne administra-} up in bed. “Wake up, Daddy,” she ally isn't the wom admire : ten to a plain position j tions of two presidents elected by| said. “I think I hear something. .. und re} until Phad led up to it from. all the «,| the greatest majorities in history,! Somebody must be trying to get hushan fferent angles, and prepared hime | iy vot common’ 224 practically every articulate ‘or- into our garage.” grievously, and r In have ‘ Ns ze Then eo Oe * Mars be. anization of the unofficial voice} dy sprang up. “I'll het it is,” ea long time be » John k that a high ¢ ei Bececer, i of public sentiment—all have spok- ied. “Tt! fter th nee “in, between these confederations + : evanoks| cee Someone, after the mats, any ote idea want to put user varies frou | AM be en ; Fane [rest of my gasoline, A burglar took | than diss mself. tacties raueh | Of tribes oe ancient Greece war-| Never was popular verdict more all esterday and my friends he ume aot the way to get | The cities of ancient rthe cities! certain and more nearly unanimous. are looking out for him.” For by I think ithe but 1, presume | MO" a » Italy Inter-city w red rything is already decided ex- that time Daddy remembered the vows tid 1 wis hefore’ me have | Of mediaeval Mary fier ‘states | cept one -thing. whole affair. He had had enough he o! no man wants | eormnd | . That pamnethen our representa- sleep Ke clear his mind a little. wont a ‘ tive institutions are representative nm je starte to aul on his es warred tates, and prov- rer ¢ f ; wants Lo sev | win lige | ines ont BEOUE ‘About one-fourth of the senators! “Burglar nothing!” said = Mrs bitey houEe hat your . undelete Me upheld Now. Nabionav@arcancnatlones | aa ifs c ‘ ably, opposed This Cracknuts hare, “That was me ats in. his es ome she is stifling th BOL aieacintecnatinnala@are: ware | minority brilliantly led. . needed gasoline to clean the spoty HEN oaeu tee cau dim nic Nis of him as uspended during the era of “Ro- If its leadership and determina- off my carpets and chairs. forgot van hold her ioh by trying to he, TOMORROW—Letter| from owed the nations. | wlan ae aatentible: asrents Gn tine scontes whan. Ne nadstoae Goma aca flirtations with—-oh, oh! 1 didn't’ Prescott to the Little Marquise, eare |W oH Stn et ianeas thers possible conditions, the wili of the explain all Fenty eee end nean to say that, Mrs. Prese of the Secret. Drawer —Continued. | 2¢ Wor stablishied: | people is defeated by the very ma-j (To Be Continued.) = an te no more wars between na-| Prone hich we have set up for! pias ” ; nS: rere \ its expression. a fine et phonograph Since the‘extinction of war by Reet 4 eal to her and he agreed to| evolution is a matter of ages, while! ,,,t¢ is by no means certain that this pure price} the preservation of _ civilization! ppe. tallments. pends on its suppression in 2 few | much in love with| deeaded, we must find something | (~~ her and he is still paying the] qui TENTURE 1 monthly installments on the phon- is no more room for battle-|| ADV ENTURE OF |: 1 ograph. But. she has married an-| fields in’ the crowded and shrink- | THE TWINS | other man iaken the phonog-| ime world, and the weapons of war! ne by raph to her new home, all unaware | have become too dangerous’ to crust | | Wor i re ey canes Hye # cach month the bill collector] to the childish impulses whica have|} BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON menimayalis, slaves ito: fashion, New York, Sept. Oct. 5—Although P But, in summer, their burden’s are i ‘ kes her former suitor a double! hitherto ruled mankind. | very light. ¢ this is the most congested in ie : de: waa theteDaday Ginekl etn the world there are areas within: nuts forgot te tell his wife about! <A@tamily-treoiien't worth. a. darn the -Soepp mbes Hina jhat ate as EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | somebody, stealing the gasoline out unless it produces peaches, rustic as can be found in any farm- | of his car, , | -—— ing section. In fact, one can ride ———— ——— = pcan | But by the time he got to the Comfort is great stuff. We can’t 15 mi utes, on ae Long Island ; EVERETT, ZT HEARD A GOOD ARISH Post, Office and looked over his ite rie ee expecting to set don’t E and prea K ardens ai vins’ y a a Boe ae within] STORN: AN IRISHMAN WIEN INTO Al | Ritace tovtall this friends, if wa ee sight of the sk Ts ut the) DEPARTMENT STORES AND SAYS "TAITH Tunch, time and Mrs, Crack eae encats HET eater e Pe sec! of t = 2" And at lunch he an rs. Crack- ‘A yaene oeimas that he) Bronx “s vitae. wilderness existe] AND BEVABERS, VOT (SS DISS3” AND note ete 20'bunytising about the [RC Toise rough house now and until only a few months ago_ anc is eee children’s new school shoes, an 5 there still are farms of consi i, Gy THE CLERK about the postal card, from BE A dan coat GaRisvitaad wb b a e e. o STS - Gray Tail saying that she was com- " in why @ wouth started to hiteh- re ee :S SAIO-, To wisit thera, that it never ene Woman can’t understand why he ton and lost his way in He ES! tered his head. It's just like aman, can’t understand. Fariunonee ahd achat toy to forget to tell his wife that he's! a) og og Hoa es calil reMInes wag been robbed, and that all his friends| The world could be worse, much fies uncordi iy telling iH m that he were coming that night to help him ware. it could be almost as bad as dads fe Uae for city 6 watch for the burglar, we often think it is, farmer has lived there The Cracknuts family lived in| p., See es 1 i has! "not oon in” Manhatt an apartment in the 'maplestree,! ,, Progress scems to consist of find- ~, that time, He has a son some three flights up. But of; i"& new things to worry about. though he was born within the city ko That afternoon Daddy said he Sets stung in the seat of his pants imits batty thought he'd go. nut-hunting so aa) fe neces gown: oA a : : to find out exactly where the best - Sonus CanAb Dep mreN anon commie nuts were. He wanted to be ready) ,,7he sreatest mistabe ts) in; not.ad- eee ee ieee toee nen toizet in a store the minute the ei Bon make mustakes, at East R rost cante. op at He is, # member of the, volunteer Mrs, Cracknuts said she was glad! ,, People who kick about the cost of ee Senareinent Were. cane “nee to get the whole family out of the living usually forget what it is night his w pt him Way, as she had so much cleaning : - to do. ae NEVER MIND WHAT THe CUGRK SAID ! “The children spot, up things! The melancholy days will be wel- Ti so,” she complained, “I never can| (coc ns rang Xi Want TO SAY YouR bear to have Mother'Gray Tail come| (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) in his undershirt before he re IRISH BROSVE |S Bie Ava aaa dant ae ne ee oe se A ae NN DUTeH i she || LITTLEJOE | A definite idea of the great PT eranii Sea anneal enn ous See nite idea of | ‘ looking up chestnut and_hickory-| heautted fre tains. te haul the night that she went to bed the very! : £= ss receipts of regis son the minute she had the children settled. : opening day niver- And Daddy said he'd just smoke sity. Bees Jone pipe and then he would come Last Christmas he was very much Be, fey eee ment aes sees in love with her. He youth t ti his “way ta, fames and fortune. She self, nd about his friends. telling was from the hinterland, und here im’ ea Heer imme pepe By naaet or eneeme ' ived in hall bedrooms, not far from i f ipto : each other in Greenwich Village. he ene ae hinaiee eed And so for a Christmas present he} sneaked through ‘the ‘bushes toward thought nothing ‘would be better the ‘Cracknute’ garay ee 5 eee than a phonograph with which she} Then Mister Bunny and his sons, could chase the blues from her bare Ben and Bill, and his nephews,the; age Deid ¢ siuallvauni oun Cottontails, came quietly through ee a —— nae me eee ee