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PAGE FOUR Py bf | officials he Biological Survey expect that in time | The Bismarck Tribune officials of the Biological yy expect that in ti jthe chachalaca will make a valuable addition to th An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER le stern part of the United States. (Established 1873) | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | there, Bismarck, ag second class mail matter. George D Mann President and Publisher | once: heard. Subscription Rates Payable In Advance | - Daily by carrier, per year. $7.20 | Fashions Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) 7.20 : Daily by mail,’ per year In India everybody's e (in state outside Bismarck)..........-+.. 6.00 uniform Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota........ 6.00 Member Audit Bureau of Clreulation Member of The Associated Press Is the The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited , to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also | World? the local news of spontaneous origin published here-, yi in. All rights of republication of all uther matter herein are also reserved. entails indicate a non-church membe Forelgn Representatlyes G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY -day dress is a religion -——— | religion, sect and caste h person belongs. ern long skirts, long sleeves and high More likely, the result will be one fashion fo CHICAGO peTRorr | Chureh going, and conformity to the general mode | Tower Bldg, Krosge Bldg, | for ail other occasions, PAYNE, BURNS ND SMITH j Which might not be such a bad thing, after all - = - Fifth Ave, Bldg. ate and County Newspd Wins American Medal The Barnard gold medal, one of the mos: import Coolidge at Omat It was especially Dr. Ni ppt Pre before Wilson to caution against me! of the American L know the. theory t the atom cansists of a nucleus. with Horrors: of WAF atid by GonLTAst Wie FeAllge more ctrons revolving about it in elliptical orbits, deeply than anyone else the blessings of peace, | ‘The Barnard medal is awarded by Columbia Un But it gs notas a pa t that sident Coolidge | Versity upon the recommendation of the ations appeared before the her of the World War, He | Academy of Science, aid emphatically: "National defense should at all Join D. Prince, American ambassador to Den- | times 1} orted, but any form of militarism | mtrk, presented the medal to Dr. Bohr oO His address was a powerful plea for disarmament The United States has always been an advocate of hed at the gre conference under the Harding admin There is still more to be accomplished | along this line in Europe before normal conditions (St. Louis Post-Dispateh) ure restored | ‘This month the Burlington i Editorial Comment this policy and much was accomplis disar istration The Burlington 75 Years Old me There might have heen some reference to the HORS of people know that by the Burlington Mitchell embroglio in this portion of Coolidge's | meant the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway | [system. The tale of its development is an epic of in pulled out of miles away, the | speech When the first tiny tr I, for the terminus “You who have been in the serviee know how absolutely necessary it is in a militar i vast agricultural region which the future Bur organization that the individual subordinate fon was to supply with fre some part of his pe ne ht and passenger serv mality for the gene ice cherished no dream of wi good, That is the one mat lesson which seer arisen the September of 15 from the training of a soldier, Who pr been taught that lesson in camp {locked him in the calaboose, and field is thereafter the better equipped | Piones to appreciate that it is equally applicable in other departments of life, It is neces- but the prair sary in the home, in industry and commerce, | transporti in scientific and intellectual development the 0 to prophesy ! already had pushed out into the 1 | ion, and the pack mule served as hon ble second. From year to year the steel At the foundation of every strong and ma glistened in strange new a , the iron hors ture character we find this trait which is snorted its conquering course to terminals which best described as being subject to discipline. became way stations, the right-of-way lengthened It is toleration in the broadest and most in with leaping bounds. Villages and hamlets and am so glad you are her nd ete! clusive sense, a liberality of mind, which cities grew up along the various lines composing |?" incr unceremoniously push gives to the opinions and judgments of oth the system. Farms multiplied by many a thousand-/him to the side and turned to Syd ers the game generous consideration that | fold [ney Cen it asks for its own, and which is moved by Government land grants in Missouri, Illinois and’ j, I haven't bee the spirit of the philosopher who declared lowa gave the Burlington its first forward thrust, get 4 ig out of Jack. Coareute that ‘To know all is to forgive all.’ It may for empire, Local communities aided the move. | {0 fave Bone entirely out of not be given to finite beings to attain that ment by organizing little railroads which were ab-| Sydney stepped forward and toox Ideal, but it is none the less one toward | sorbed into the growing system, which, with its) Pg Py Meee ag weit which we should strive.” auxiliaries, comprises now approximately 11,500; you the whole thing. Jack ran i In answer to those who clamor for excessive | daily, levies for military preparedness, President Coolidge | in the world, points out that the nation today as a larger army | Holden of Kansas City, for its they ever have | ‘The Burlington is gr president. and navy costing twice as much at because the Middle W in times of peace. In the past six y billion has been pent. Then he draws this con: | at this ing to advance the other. Congratulations annive ry period, are due to both, clusion: “Peace and security are more likely to result from fair and honorable dealings and The Mounds in Siberia mutua agreements for a limitation of (Adventure) armaments among nations than by any at The similarity of the burial mounds in Siberia, tempt at competition in squadrons and north of Gobi, with those several thousand miles battalion: distant on the Black Sea, Were built by the Mongols There is no note of the pacifist, however, in his | address. He pledges the administration to a per-| fection of every branch of national defense; Land | forces, air for The demobili Khanates of Central Asia—the Golden Horde, ete. es, surface and submarine forces, in the sixteenth century. No one knows for cer tion of racial prejudices he urges | tain. as the greatest guaranty of world peace. Such) There are also found in the steppes curious stone t. antagonisms, hatreds and suspicions the war failed | warriors and women that face always to the io lessen. In some quarters the intensified | And I think the figure monuments of Siberia a them. The great work of diplomacy as Coolidge | very much like them. The Cossacks relate that sees it if to create an attitude of tolerance. when these stone women And the place to begin is as he sa) |gate posts for a house in some Russ at home. in truth and justice, in charitableness and toler- | though one can draw them back again. ance,” At any rate most of the Cossacks are extremely Phe entire addre unwilling to dig up the burial sites, the kurgans Peiigcatneed. 4k w A hundred years ago the British explorer, Clarke, Dody of men rep a fearless resume of a great | addressed to a powerful | senting millions of voters upon whose shoulders rest a grave responsibility. It took this to a gathering of this kind: | men from the village to help him the next d The ; men were ready enough until they found out that he wanted to uncover a nearby kurgan. They re- “Whenever military power st ing fused point-blank—said it was unthinkably unlucky to the civil authority, hy whatsoever means nd Clarke did not get a look at the inside of adopted, the liberties of the country are be the mound. sinning to end.” i Regs | The Docto This great organization of Legion men applauded | 4 the spirit of that sentiment, for it epitomized Amer (Grafton Record) icanism, President Coolidge did not minimize the |__* Gtafton doctor went out hunting the other day. calling of the soldier. He praised it. But through | @ hunted from early in the morning until late at all his address he struck a careful and essential | MHSHt and took an appetite home with him that ate rts dic Lost Key balance between the civil and the military. up everything in the house and worried the cook ate Sinaia \ | Stove for more.» The next day he hurried home with sweat on his hat ba a ed i lace. He Meet Chachalaca tol hat band and red in the face. © SRS ce cae nana cont It & city. | 28Ked his wife where those pants were that he had aise. ec x e ae Hes, he, nenet U. 8. : 1U-) worn out hunting. She told him where she was per, He mas brought into the United States (rom airing them and. die hurriedly went through the mexico. pockets with an expectant look on his face that was The Bureau of Biological Survey of the U. S. De-| not satisfied. He told his wife that he had lost the partment of Agriculture brought him into the coun-| key to his inside office and that two men were ‘try. The chachalaca is a game bird, a near rela-| waiting to have their pulse felt for $5, and that dive of the pheasants. he had taken the office key out hunting and it had © ‘Two years ago the bureau introduced a number of| probably got into nis gun and he had lost it. He Ahe birds into Sapeloe Island, Georgia. Recent in-| went down town and hired a master mechanic to vestigation shows that the birds are thriving. Sev-{ unhinge his door and it looked like business around eral dozen nested on the island this year, and a} the doctor's office. it wag finally discovered that | game bird list of the wooded sections of the south The bird nests in trees and spends much time uthough he feeds upon the ground. He ha: Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at/ a loud, rattling call which can be heard over a | great distance and which is easily remembered You can tell instantly, by his cosutme, to what ade for “modest” clothing likely tu produce something analogous in’ the western lars | indicate a devout person, while “worldly” fashions [ant American scientific awards, has been given to els Bohr of Copenhagen, the propounder of | the so-called Bohr theory of the atom. This is the | | old, Mil- to be. Had a sent Burlington, Aurora probably would have states now served in part by this great railroad: > schooner was the chief agent of | ‘ails miles of trackage, operates 450 passenger trains | boasts of being the biggest livestock carrier and has a native Missourian, Hale! irs about four) js great. They have grown up together, each help ' seems to indicate that they —perhaps in the age of Genghis Khan, perhaps in the day of Tamerlane (as we call Timur-i-lang), perhaps in the time of the are carried away, to make n Village, it | There must be a reaffirmation of “our ancient faith | kes a half dozen oxen to drag them to the west, | jasked the hetman of the Don Cossacks for some! mage golony has spread to the neighboring Blackbeard ‘sland. The chachalaca ig a slender-bodied game bird, ‘live brown in color. They weigh about as much ‘pe 4 ruffed grouse. “ The flesh of the bird is said to be delicious, and i someone would have to go over the transom and the doctor rose to the occasion. On making the descent his head went down first and a number of things dropped out of his pocket to the floor, but he only noticed one thing in particulaf: It was the key to his office, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Resurrecting the Wreck | r| i | | R FROM TO THE CAR | LETTE | corr | QUIS plan nt it would, re the reporters could j thing to her, “What thing hap And 1 in to find s the door opened, I hear m Mrs, Atherton an At the moment and shut the hal ‘Oh, I am so glad y car about eight o'clock this eve cont oy badly hurt and t the -girl will’ die.” terrible! Did you t both to the hospitar, J answered hat's whe mistake. He tried to get i; unnoticed because there was fa young lady with him. i seemed to freez¢ up completel 7 WELL, AL Ceglincy OuGRT® ANE IT IN FIRST CLASS RUNNING ORDER was the reason the hall door as t about! from California.” k pulled me in} * to do with | can not | differ from the Republican declara- Senator , who is not only | was getting some gasoline at the a Republican, but | “Twin Garage” and having a bot- ial Republican leader on the very issue on which he Borah, for ins: still recognized a Senator Lodge, “regular” of regu- |. The reason that he jumped was was not read out the same thing. Old Guarders | bottle it went “pop.” themselves | ‘lmo: Republican bonus, | Nancy. ing boy and a girl.! look on his face I could see that he to help Jack out with explanatéons. “stand- ke o ! vd for my hus-] he made his! NEA Service, Inc.) | TOMORROW—Letter from Prescott to the Little Marquise, care sis what T have been ex- Peer She | Drawer—Continued. |pecting ever since I heard Jack's t had thus New Oct. 8. of life in New York changes with the seasons. Somehow we ca wll laugh at the man who ¢! es his hat down the traffi warm duly day. We wateh the out- come of his » with high amuse- ment, know I well that his chances of saving the straw beanie are one in thousand. And, sure enough, “Cranch!” and another j the thousands of — broken that fill the street And we howl with glee as blows inside out the thou: cheap umbrellas picked up from corner vend during an unex | pected rain, and the streets grow feluttered with parasol skeletons We can smile even at the fat man who is a veritable Niagara of per spiration in the subw: there is nothing funny about nched face behind an all too ger wrap. This is the season when the con he wind the leaves. The loungers in the parks and upon the Library. steps are. thin ning out. And those that gather now sit there, not for mere r j about the emplo: |more anxious fa | Down on the East Side, where the pusheart peddlers defy | wind and | storm, like veteran mariners, they {now begin to break packing boxes into kindling and build bonfires in the center of the street, gathering around to stamp feet and clap h and adjust mufflers. On the side streets appear chil- dren with little carts, picking, up shavings and bits of wood. There is little to smile at and less to laugh at--for the comedy of life in New York changes with the seasons. Also this is the season of leases. The country, the seashore, the mountains and Europe have return- ed most of New York’s strollers and stragglers and landlords run about demanding that the dotted line be signed. For few rentals of worthwhile places in New York are negotiated without the signing of one’s liberty away for a year’s period. The wise ones have sub-letted for the sum- imer or come into town early. And [ perhaps one of the most wistful psights to be seen at this season is nent agencies wear \ RR A a | exoups, up early is because the Old Guard considers itself regular even when it | new car, he would probably be too irregular | much surprised to do you any harm it has the regular nom- | anyway.” ndorsed by the regu- Well, I hope so,’ livable place Peery ne lar organization Wortd Court Fight Goes On Announcement The comedy} | EVERETT TRUE HEY, EVERETT, - T'M “SOING You A BUNCH OF SNAPSHOTS t4teok on MY TRIP! xs nmed thoroughfare on aj — edy of New York changes even as} | tion, but because there is no place lelse’ to go. The crowds that group} YOURS GSING TO SH Your H&EsCS!? HOT BREAD BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service cad-:taffs may be divided rough- ly into a number of general classes. The first of these classes is bread proper. Praiout-one-fifth of the total food for Americans is composed of wheat | products, These wheat products are made up largely into the form of loaf ‘bread and contain roughly a third of ithe protein and two-fifths of the ‘starch and sugar consumed. The} average American eats about one ‘barrel of flour a year. ; | “Bread alone does not constitute a balanced diet. Milk more nearly ap- proaches such a balanced dict. Most [of the bread we consume is raised with yeast. ; When bread is raised the minor |yeast plants feed upon the sugar in he warm dough. These plants grow and multiply and — by fermentation |give off what is known as carbon- | dioxide gas. This carbon-dioxide gas lforces its way through the gluten, | spreads all through the sticky ma: jof dough and lightens the loaf. Bread Should Be Well Baked | Raw gluten is more perfectly di gested than is cooked gluten, starchy \ grains must be burst open by heat in | order to make them digestible. \ | If bread is not well baked it forms a hard lump in the mouth. If your| ‘bread separates easily when it is! chewed you may know that your! bread is well baked. The crust of lwell baked bread should be brown and haré You have probably been warned against the use of hot breads. TO DIGEST—CUMMING NOT HARD All things being equal, bread right out of the oven is probably as di- gestible as any other if eaten prop- erly. There is a tendency on the part of most people to swallow without chewing any food that is fresh and soft, and herein lies the danger from fresh bread. Do you know why the average per- son swallows soft fresh food without properly chewing? Dry food excites the salivary glands which produce the saliva in the mouth; soft fresh foods, partic- ularly moist fresh bread, does not set up the same kind of- excitement in these glands and little saliva is produced. Hot bread also tempts you to over-eat and large quantities of bread are difficult to dispose of. Toast Easier to Digest — Zwieback and toast are easier to digest than fresh bread. These are hard, they require thorough chewing and their starches have been changed into soluble sugars. True graham flour is wholesome. Some graham flour, however, is sim- ply inferior flour mixed with bran. Good graham flour shows large amounts of coarse and fine mid- dlings mixed with bran. Cornmeal is another substantial bread-stuff. Unbolted cornmeal con- tains several times as much fat as high-grade wheat flour. In addition, it possesses a laxative quality. Many crackers have a higher fuel value than bread since they contain a higher percentage of protein, fat and carbo-hydrates. Crackers, while they form a valuable article of diet, ought not to take the place of bread in ordinary life. inst the policy of President Cool- | idge and of both parties o2 the | world court, to start with a speech by Senator Borah in Chicago Oct. 20, and to be continued by Mrs. Medill MeCormick and others. i T means, of course, that a cam- on the affirmative side of the ume issue is also in order. It will be rather refreshing to ave such a aign of education, uncomplicated with either personal ‘or party polities. There ig no’ el tion on, and nobody is a candi for offic ‘ e re on the same side nd neither of them issue, can gain or lose by it. Nothing will be involved but the issue itself. And that, if the as yet inarticu- ute part of the people at all re-| sembles the articulate part, is al-| j ready settled one way. Organized public opinion has already spoken, | and it is almost unanimous. | it enly remains for a campaign | of public discussion to inform, and SIMS The worst man we know about got married because he heard a wife was cheaper than a janitor. The aborigines of Australia eat moths, so would make fine watch- men in overcoat factories. The sun‘: age is put at about five million years, but then it goes to bed very early every night. Men can't keep matches any bet- ter than women can keep hairpins. Never give a man a hat for a wed- ding present. A week or so later | Sound out, organized opinion. Any | it will be entirely too large. j one leader or group of leaders! | might easily be mistaken in mating popular sentiment. es | It is inconceivable that they all) Sen-! are. to ung | ‘- | ADVENTURE OF La Follette out of the Republican part THE TWINS {| BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON One day when Mister Ben Bunny | tle of pop into the bargain. he sud- denly jumped about two feet. | because when Nancy ‘opened the ister Bunny own ears. laughed t jumped over “What's the matter? Liquor is often considered as a substitute for love. The Chinese are raising more peanuts than Americans now, but we still eat more in picture shows. Some germs are so small a million of them’ can sit on the point of a pin and yet be lonely. Hair has muscles but doesn't make people strong headed. They still, worship the sun in (India. We may do the same this | winter if coal goes up. The stingiest man on earth won't |smoke if he can sit between two 'men who are smoking. | It takes all kinds of people to ‘make a world and only a few kinds , to ruin it, Mister Bunny looked sheepish. “I’m nervous. that’s what's the mat- ter,” he said. “But you can't blame $s of Wiscon-|me’ much. Ringtail Coon said this the regular | Morning that he had seen clect- ne only candidates agains him were bolters, running independ: Old won bolter | ter Hunter probably doesn't know would have been read out of the party. hunter around with a gun. I don't know whether he was a coon hunter, or a rabbit hunter, but I'm not ‘one for taking chances. From now on Tam going to be careful.” “Yes, I should,” said Nick. “Mis- that you have an automobile this year, though. He will be looking for ‘footprints instead of automo- bile tracks. If we saw you in your said Mister Bunny shaking his head. “But I am worried just the same.” Mister Bunny didn't say that he of the| knew another reason why he was campaign | Worrying. He had helped himself BY CON TO, SHOW to the good things in Mister Far- mer’s sass-patch garden all summer. ters and nieces and nephews. And; one day he had heard the farmer “When I get the winter wheat all in and the thrashing over, and have a little time to myself, 1 am going after that rabbit family that has been pestering me all summer. “I can't help what is over and done," he had said, “but I can see to it that there are fewer rabbits around to bother me next year.” Mister Bunny reached down into the gasoline and pop! and_ paid asked. “Nice and fresh with plenty of pep in it like your pop? “Yes,"t_ laughed Nick. “We jus got it’ fresh this morning. If won’t go, just come back and I'll exchange’ it.” “That's fine!” thought Mister Bunny to himself. “If I do happen Farmer, I can step on the gas and get out of thteir way faster than T can hop.” He got -into his car and waved his hand good-bye. Then down the road he chugged and ‘the last the Twins saw of him, he was turning see a soul safe now.’ But suddenly “bang!” _ Mister Bunny let go of the steer- ing wheel for a minute, feeling con- vinced that he was shot. But quick as a wink he grabbed it again. “If he said. “I guess I'm car anyware he thought. But he was trembling so he could scarce- ly guide it. “Ha, ha, ha!” laughed - someone overhead just then.“I'll bet that scared you, Mister Bunny. Did you think you were shot?” “Y—yes, wasn’t 1?” asked the poor trembling bit gentleman. “It sounded like it. “Why, it wi four own car that cramble Squirrel. “It back-fired, I guess. And a big puff of smoke came ‘out behind. I was watching.” “Goodness alive!” said Mister Bunny. “Is that all?” 1 guess I am extra nervous today.” But his’ troubles. were not over. (To continued.) He and all of his sons and daugh-| his pocket and got the money for) Nick. “Is it good gasoline?” hei t to see Mister Hunter or Mister| and _Kissing is dangerous. It makes a girl's nose shiny. | Experience would be a much bet- ter teacher if she stopped to explain things to us. a Opinions of Others | > —— An important government post, a branch of U. S. Department of Agri- culture, having its office in the midst of our city, first under the di- tion of Dr. Robert Tracy (de- ceased) and now under the leader- ; Ship of Dr. H. H. Cohenour and his leight assistants in the field, has been entirely overlooked all ‘these years or not yet discovered by our Publicity agenis, _ One of Dr. Cohenour's associates is Dr. G. J. Worner, residing in the \ capital city and weil known in our social circles, but no word is men- | tioned about’ his good work in this state. This staff is entrusted to safe- guard the health of our animal pop- julation. They are always on the alert for any contagious disease that may appear among the animals in our state. They are charged with the suppression and eradication of all communicable 2nd infectious dis- leases. They are to enforce quaran- tine measures, and safeguard our horders from’ unwelcome guests. They are at present engaged in a vigorous campaign to eradicate tu- berculosis, a disease taking a heavy oll yearly in our infant population, and which is undermining the pro: ductivity of our livestock industry. In different sections of this state | tuberculosis has made it unprofit- lable to raise any livestock. To my. knowledge the campaigns | to rid our state of this dreadful dis: lease is meeting with great success, I hope that their efforts will be repaid in many different way: —A Bismarck Citizen, Elephants continue growing until they reach 40 years of age.” ELECTRIC COOKERY ee corer of pee lane jpetwees the! MEANS elderberry patch and t! oke-ber-! ry. bushes. pews! COOKING IN COMFORT . Mister Bunny looked carefully; ——————_———_________ around in every direction. “I don't! @————. | LITTL EJOE | Al oo IN THE MOUTH 19 3) WORTH TWO ON THE I'm shot I’m not going to wreck the! DENTISTS SHELFS