The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 14, 1925, Page 4

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2a State mses a MRO DOs Bu fom ww RESERS So RR EES, me gees R.. ' fer es “increased from $4,925,000,000 last PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune. An Independent Newspaper THE STAT’ OLDE NEWSPAPER (Establishea 1873) year to $5,651,000,000. This includes an allowanc. for the farmers’ labor in addition to the $2,712,000,- | 000 cash return. | Hired farm hands were paid $1,206,000,000, as against $. 000,000 last year, i Taxes paid approximated $617,000,000, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ag second clas matte. i George D Mann ident and Publisher) Subseriptlon Rates Payable In Advance Crowds The thrill of a huge crowd! It wag thrill that caused ancient Romans to build 1 ( Dally by carrier, per year... $7.20 their big coliseum and to jam it full of people for Daily by mail, per year (in Biamarck)......++ 720) every public event | Daily by mail,’ per year aah i. | (in state outside Bismarck)... . 6.09 The world today is far less barbarous than the) Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota.... - 6.00) Romans, but there's hardly an American who doesn't Member Audit Bureau of Clreulation get a thrill out of a big erowd assembled for some! big sporting event Member of The Assoclated Presy i} ts out of watching the world The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the The real thrill one x use for republication of all news dispatches credited series baseball games 1s not in the play, which to It or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also. often is ordinary, but in the crowd itself, the local new cous origin published here There's nothing clse in the world quite like the: #reat howl of chee houts and general joy that when a hit scores the win ning run for the home team in the last of the ninth | in. All herein rig are all uther matter also re S, Forelgn Representatives comes from the crowd G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO. DETROIT. as | Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. Billions | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Asn tempor: war debt settlement. France rees to pay the United States $40,000,000 a year} Fifteen years ago $40,000,000 would | W YORK Ave, Bldg for five years. have (Official City, nd Courty Newspape f money. | been a lot o Issues and Candidates But now the war changed government. finance. | Teale Lie Cis AR TBuie hedges Now it is just about 1 per cent on the French debt | presidential ¢ n will not be esperially attrac: | 0 $4,000,000,000 or 3 per cent less than this govern tive to the rank and file of the party, the Democrats Ment is paying on the money it borrowed from the | are casting about for a likely candid nd an American people to lend France | imposing that will take as well What are a few million dollars between govern: | in the north as the maDtaniiers | Political observers who have been beating the ae | bushes, declare that the tariff will not do as an os . | isstioe ‘The D ‘id th nie More than 220i) women are now practicing a9 very much Interest over it in the north and the PMrmacists in the United States, according to f R. Peterson, president of the National Associatio with which is expanding industrially does mot res) 5 01° 10% ; of Retail pists, gard free trade with the old time ardor, Protective "000 a , ; iésull duties are growing in popularity south of the Mason Fae creek ce eh era) wake lene dali Digen ling forvvery slots ‘Feauaa than 50 women pharmacists in the United States and Dixe e for very obvious reasons. | : Peterson that the science of pharmacy will The Democrats seem to be going on the assump gain much from the entry of women into it, since tion that Calvin Coolidge will be the Republican there are many phases of it which can be studied nominee in 1928, Is few trips into the middle West | hose from a woman's point of view. indicate that he has not lost his hold upon the _ agricultural regions, He js popular with the farm Philanthropy ers and growing in favor. Few presidents have : had a greater faculty of saying the right thing at the opportune moment employing 30 of the greatest opera singer: nd ns in the world for weekly radio concerts Coolidge hag demonstrate that he knows the psychology of polities. mu | suggests that wireless may inaugurate a new form of philanthropy. Radio m be the Carnegie library of the futur There is considerable emphasis still upon economy i | | The action of A, Atwater Kent of Philadelphia in} | | and reduced taxation, but evidences are present also | that the administration will not ove play its hand. ssibilities along this line can easily be im-| Its pe The address at Omaha indicated that the adminis’ agined when you consider that ‘radio probably tration has more than one issue and that the cam: peaches more people in one night than the Carnegie paign of 128 is not going to be focused entirely upon | tibraries do in a month. i economy so vigorously initiated by Coolidge, | The increasing | popularity of Coolid desperately for Democrats view with the They are casting about pand an is that will he trip of Al Smith to Chicago was timed nicely following the defeat of the Hearst-Hylan organization, wa staged to give Smith an ovation presidential candidate. tantly opposed to or alarm Editorial Comment a candid, stir popular attention. The Tennis Champion (New York Evening Post) The tennis championship of the United States has deen won for the sixth’ time by “Big Bill’ Tilden after a stirring battle with the man whom he has defeated sverything nd to revive him He is wet and mili anizations that seek to draw racial and religious i into polities. five times out of six in the final matches of the an-, Bitterness that developed over the religious issue nual tournaments. Tilden, at the top of his game, ! at the last Democratic national convention will be stands as its representative figure; his record of sus: | tow to abate. This schism in the Democratic ranks Ss against all comers and all countries surpasses is made wo through differences over the is: that of any other player in the long list of expert of prohibition. Governor Smith is a pronounced wielders of the racquet. wet. ‘That he can ever be attractive as a candidate Tennis calls for a peculiar combination of quali- to the progressive wing dominated by the memory ties, and Tilden seems to have them. His tall stature, and ideals of William Jennings Bryan seems im- Jong reach and dependable physique are the servants probable The east in the has foisted pres: of quick mental reactions and an uncanny intuition for the weak spots in the armor of his foeman. istrous results. Moreover, he has not attained his eminent rating in Parker's candid, in point. | the selfish isolation of some champions of sport; he The S'mith presidential boom launched after the has brought out other stars of no small magnitude New York muayoralty contest is not bringing the and worked for the development of the sport he loves, two wings of the party together, No progress in in realization of the fact that “the game is more than uniting the Smith and McAdoo factions has been the player of the game.” | The old fire were kindled at Madison Garden smoldering. Popular a « would seem almost past idential cimdidates upon the insurgent west not to dit its liking usual Alton with ty is a made. ill ndidacy Square Smit i Enforcing All Laws (Wilkes Barre Times Leader) Possiblo now as: when it held the national conven} “Why don't you start an agitation for enforcing tion deadlocked for days. all laws equally, instead of putting all the stress on There is intense differences on the religious and’ enforcing the prohibition law?” say some whose real inte enforced. Bless you; that is exactly what is being done. Only, the way to enforce laws equally is to en- eech can; force them unequally, That is, enforcement should leave no doubt as to his stand on the issue of toler | be equally proportioned to resistance. ance both as regards races and religion, In th) If a law is resisted one ounce, one ounce of pres- Republican family the atmosphere is clear to this | sure should he applied to enforcing it, If the resist: extent at least. | ance is one pound, the enforcement should also be Foreign relations present the most serious prob: a pound. And if the resistance ig a ton, the only! lems in the Republican party and the issues upon | way to make enforcement “equal” ig to enforce it a which party harmony might be wrecked before the | ton also. nomination in 1928. Senator Borah, who by all the | So, an ounce of effort on one law and a ton on rules of the political game should be the mouth- | another is prec y the way to be “equal” in en- piece of his party in the senate, is in conflict with | forcement energy. the White House on many vital issues. Settlement Whenever the weta want the pressure on proh of the various war debts will not be conducive to | tion enforcement, reduced to one ounce, they can! party harmony so that there is enough unfinished | easily bring that about by reducing their own efforts | business on hand for some lively contests in the | against it to the same amount. ranks. | ‘The political situation is interesting and most dit- | ficult from a party management standpoint. Cool- | idge’s personality dominates the situation now a9/ A mine dump, as most people in this section far as Republic are concerned. As for the Dem-! know, is an enormous pile of debris heaped up in ocrats they are widely apart on both issues and) the process of working an iron mine. | didates. Some of them on the Minnesota ranges cover Can Coolidge hold {he factions in line through | many acres, and they usually form the bleakest and another campaign? [most depressing feature of the landscape, What leadership will the Democrats develop in} Last spring some Hibbingite with a vision, the prohibition issues in the Democratic party. Re- Publicans have been either more fortunate or more astute in handling these perplexing problems, The | Republican party aud administration are committed | prohibition and Omaha is that they do not want this one law on volidge's Beautifying the Ugly (Duluth Herald) 8 the next two years? news reports don't say whether it was a man or a i These are important and interesting politica! woman, succeeded in interesting the Boy Scout | = phases of the national situation. | council, the Rotarians and other public-spirited s0- | | cieties in a plan to transform these ugly excrescen- | American Farmers’ Income ‘ces into attractive tree-crowned hills. American farmers received a net cash income of, About two thousand trees were obtained from! $2,712,000,000 during the crop year 1924-25, accord- | the state forestry department, and with the help ot ing to estimates made by the Department of Agri-. the members of these various organizations all of culture. ; them were planted on the dumps near Hibbing. This is an increase of $720,000,000 compared with) ‘That they did a good piece of work came to light the previous year. the other day when a committee of Rotarians made The estimate, which is the result of a survey and/an inspection and found that less than a dozen analysis of the entire industry, reveals the follow-' trees had been lost during the summer, and that ing interesting figures: , all the others were flourishing. A beautiful grove tlicense at the Municipal Building. 1 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE If at First You Don’t Succeed—— —— * BY GOLLY, | BELIEVE \ (NE FINALY FouND Tae “MAKIN'S' TARTS GOING i our ALL RIGHT ® |: The T, = TER FROM L rO THE LITTLE care THE S ER—CO LIE PR MARQUE John and en together nle during the next friend. You won't in the next week or y-riding.” know,” said my husband, miserably. “You don't have to rub it I've told you T've heen a fool Why can't you let it go at that, Syd? I think 1 could bear it, however, if I could get out of this mess myself, without having to bring Leslie into Svd_ seem still further, for Leslie will have s much as po days, my have much time two to go “Oh, T few nfortunately, Jack, you should have thought of that before you did this foolish thing,” yd's come ment. H Jack turned on friend; impa tiently, arely. ng that silly littl nd getting her freat sin, do you “Not in the le: I don’t think it even a meanor. It was just a Have you not found, Jack, takes or foolish impulses ar punished more than real sins ly your own experiences in the must have taught you t of compensation vd, you do not think tak stenographer upper was t, Jack, my boy misd is placable. Whatever we do to o whatever w have ourselves, he paid for. If we receive, it is hecause we have given. Always, we must pay. It is poor humanity struggle to Payment t makes all the y of the w Very few o understand angle were informed that both the boy and | the girl were better, much better than they were expected to be the| | night before. 1th di the take for our mood not in 1 John I kn d to me w you've nd have he ‘xood many serapes, but I've paid /an auto driver thought a girl looked it by listening to your sermons] iore interesting than the road. over again, aise Uf telephone for your taxi, Mrs Heaven, to a small boy, must be a erton,” bh id, as he turned to left th p y, | bowed to nd with this, room. . 1 heare a long time raised too h voice h natu i is resentin sermon,” I said to mysel | were talking when I went to | Thad my coffee at seven {2 and was ready to accompzny d the hospital. As we got into oar]. motor, we reporters rking | is about the street, and for their bene-| th it, we tried to be very much en-| grossed in each other. hen we reached the hos ia, , we Jack gave a great sigh windows is compulsory. hh you will be Whether a friend <{ What he is in need of. Ss iS e: fr: They are called dancé halls. with the Charleston going on “dance | haul” is nearer the truth. Progress consists of swapping old| think 1 s go without! won't have to e where throwing rocks through rs the only way ee the country n a few more able to 118 by peeping over a billboard. in need is a y depends upon indeed ‘oldiers of fortune often become tains of industr ‘ome people's idea of a good time sitting around wondering what would do if they were not But} WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1925 ALL MILK PRODUCTS ARE CONCENTRATED FOOD - BY DR. HUGH Ss, CUMMID Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service The nearest thing one can get to a balanced ration in one food is mill A small glassful of milk, that five ounces, contains approximate 100 calories of fuel value. It con- tains protein, carbohydrates, and fat and in addition valuable ‘ferments that aid in digestion. It is rich in organic salts and vita- mines, those compounds which are so important and necessary to huma i} 1 1 | health. | There are few normal digestive systems which have any trouble with pure milk provided the milk is taken into the body slowly and pro- vided too large a quantity of milk is not taken at one time. In severe cases of acid stomach it may be nec- y to'add vichy, bicarbonate of soda, or lime water. Milk is more digestible if it is tak- en alone between meals You should remember also that no other food requires such scrupulous cleanliness at every step. Bacteria are as fond of milk as most intelli- gent humans and a great number of infections may be spread through unclean milk, You can understand the impor- tance of clean production better if you realize that even the taste of milk is affected by the food of the cow and by lack of cleanliness. Watch Ice Cream Ice cream, which is a favorite milk product, depends for food value upon its composition improperly n be} of poor quali be made! under insanitary conditions. ' You should know something about the conditions under which your fav- orite brand of ice cream is being manufactured. Dirty ice cream may transmit t) phoid and other infectious diseases just as dirty milk may. The food alue of ice cream is generally high- er than most people realize. An order of good ice cream at a lunch counter contains practically m calories as a ham, chicken or cheese sandwich. You should know this fact also because a couple of dishes of rich ice cream following a heavy dinner may prove a dis- tressing last straw on an already overloaded stomach. Physiologically, also, the introduc- tion of large quantities of ice cold materials into the stomach has marked effect in checking the fe ments from the inner coating of the stomach. Ice cream should be eaten slowly in order that it may not reach the digestive organs at such a low temperature. Concentrated Food Butter, another milk product, i: fat and is a very concentrated food Butter, like all fats, should not he eaten in lumps. The digestion of fat should be made easy. There are few more delicious or better foods than well-made fresh butter. You should know, however that hot melted butter taxes the digestion. The reason for this is that when butter is melted the ter which separates the s bules of fat is evaporated. evaporation on es the att melted butter by the digestive j much more difficult. Cheese deserves to be used much more generally than it is. It is an asily digested food. A pound of ore cheese cont pout ulories as a pound of lean round beef and about four times i ; much protein, If you are troubled with indige tion after eating cheese do not con- clude that cheese is not good fo you. Your indigestion may be to the fact that you have for that cheese should be over-chey and that cheese should not he in too large a quantity. Much of the trouble caused by cheese is due to under-chewing and over-eating. | The budget system has not yet transformed national politics. The president runs on an econo- my platform, because economy what all of us, taken together, w: Each congressman runs on an ex- travagance platform, because appro-) priations are what each part of us,! separately, wants. We get the economy by main strength and presidential dictator- ship, and our congressman gets our thanks and our votes by whatever inroads on it he has been able or lucky enough to make. So every- body is satisfied, and the old game goes on in the old way. In local governments, it is begin- ning to be more embarrassing. The most popular platform is, of course. to advocate lower taxes and more public expenditures. Unfortunately the candidate, if he is elected, and if he gets his popular appropriations through, has also to vote for a tax rate that will raise the necessary money. A western city manager called the heads of the Chamber of Commerce} and other civic leaders together and asked them to recommend what they thought the city should do. i Whatever any of them suggested, if the rest approved, he put on the! blackboard, and at the end added them up and showed that they would have required a tax rate three times higher than even the present high rate. of relief, when he heard the news,; troubles for new. Soon enengh for the people to re- und some of his ruddy color came member, this situation comes home ack into his face. He h The man who makes his way is) to roost in local governments, under nd pale befor the only one who can have his way.! the budget system. i tings will s Politics und politicians _ suffer.! ott, but I would s not if f were you, d the interne, lon; TOMORROW—Letter from Leslic Prescott to the Little Marquise. New York, Oct. halls are so ‘often mned that it might be interesting to he: pout one which is the seat of helpful good- ness. Publie dance It is the one i do by Miss et Allen, in which she pro- vides honest, life-sustaining employ- is who ment for 50 gi e temporarily out of theatr These girls wait on tables, dance with the crowds or give instruction, The difference comes in the atmosphere of the place. And_in addition to the dance hall, Miss Allen has established a sort of “woman's exchange” where actresses he waiting out of jobs may bring their jwork and sell it while work. read of a bows off the nothing more or two you who suicide stage “bec: to live for, Therefore, it n be refreshing to think of Mme. Francoise Levapreste who just celebr: her 104th birthday on Staten Is ne! admits that a 100. rry he efuse because she thinks the hus band always should be the older. “But,” she says, “the heart is never too old for romance.” who to Notice to out-of-t here to get married: to go with her bride ping The bride has room to jet the know a young couple whose marital ship nearly was wrecked before it was launched because the man went alone to the lice bureau, tate in the afternoon. Correcting the er ror cost frantic telephoning and taxi riding. And it could not have been set right then if the ‘icense clerk— had not waited half an hour after closing time to accommodate the ‘young lovers. Rebla, the juggler who just ar- |rived from abroad to entertain Amer- ican vaudeville dancers, carries thé |distinction of having appeared at Individual farmer's takings has increased from jg only a matter of a few years. an average of $764 last year to $876 this year. This report has attracted the favorable notice of Rate on the farmer's invested capital rose from| other range communities, and extensive tree-plant- 1.5 per cent in 1923-24 to 3.6 in 1924-25. ing programs are to be a feature next year. Hib- Gross income rose from $11,288,000,000 to $12,-, bing seema to have inspired another worth-while movement that should add immensely to the ap- , pearance of the average mining location, command performances before royal- ty eleven times. Among those for whom the juggler has been court jester are the King and Queen of England, Princess Mary and the Duke of York and Queen Maude of Norway. Which should indicate either that royalty isn't so hard take his girl to the v: such a low-brow. was given free, riety show isn't aS W. DEAN. In 1923, 81 per cent of all hospi- tal treatment in the United States | New York policeman are fined one day's pay for cussing out citizens. | incubators for hatching chickens. Spend your life making faces at {People and you look that way. Woman's place when she is out of place everything else is out of plac Wouldn't it be awful if we always were a (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) I in the home and of dull people wear smart awful as we often are? en the ancient Egyptians had EVERETT TRUE WHEN XT HD HIME SLPPOSS HE SQip = L DON'T YOUR Face AS CLOSG TO HIS AS ‘YOU Do KNOW. TO MING HE SHOULD boiled about its entertainment or that the young fellow who likes to SAND WHAT, MR. TRUG, DO You SUPPOSE) THAT So-CALLGCD BUSINGSS But BY CONDO MAN SAID WHAT Do OU (F YOU HSLD HAVS Perhaps, finally, the people will learn. It will be worth it. Saving a Hundred Million Senator Curtis suggests to Presi- dent Coolidge the chopping off of about 20 “usele: boards and com- missions, and the consolidation of others in existing executive depart- ments. He estimates that a hun- | dred million dollars could be saved. If a hundred million is the total present cost of these commissions. then the estimate of saving is doubt- less too high. For most of these boards are not “useless. Their work ought to be done, and it will cost money for some one to do it, under any system. But there is no question that the present meth- od of doing it is needlessly extra agant, and, what is worse, ineffici- ent. The situation in most states worse than that of the federal gov ernment, but the cause is the same in all. "New functions have been added to government, one at a time, them have been added without sy: tem. and the instrumentalities to handle} ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Markie Muskrat’s name was the very last to go on the list for the race. It was to be a big race, with more than twenty people in it. Indeed, when Markie put his nam down with the — stubb; i -pencil ging by a string, Nick gave him piece of muslin with a big printed on it in black ink. “You are to put this on your ¢ mewhere,” said Nick. “The the best place, for people can see it there. What kind of a car are you going to race with?” “Huh!” asked Markie, blinking eyes. kind of a car have you said Nick again. “I have to put down the kind of a car you are going to drive in the race. What is it? Markie blinked rapidly because he had to think rapidly. guess you can call it a—a—Hash,’” said M, kie. “Yes, that’s what I'll drive—a ‘Hash’ car.” hat's a funny name,” said Nick. “I never heard of it. Don’t you mean sh’? ‘0, nothing like that,” said Mar- It's a ‘Hash’ car,” he said in, He started to grin from car to ear, and finally be laughed out loud. He was still laughing when he went away swinging his number. The next place he went to was the repair shop down the road where the wrecking car stood. Also about a dozen old rusted cars that looked as though there had been an explosion mewhere. “What'll you give me all that junk for?” the littla fellow asked the man who had the shop. The man thought for a while. In the end it was arranged that Markie should work for a week without pay And he should have all the stuff he wanted at the end of that time, to do as he pleased with. Besides that, when he wasn’t busy helping Mister Goat, he could have his spare time to himself. It was exactly what Markie wanted! Well, at last the day of the race came and everybody for miles around flocked to the place to see who was going to win the gold medal. Ringtail Coon’s yellow racer car which had all been fixed over, looked as_ yellow as Cinderella’s pumpkin, before it turned into a coach. And all the other cars had been repaired and painted and fixed up, too. Every car had a big number fasten- ed onto the back and it certainly looked like Fair Day or something. The race track around the pond was scraped as smooth and as level as a bread board. All the people in the grand stand, and right across the track sat the judges who were to manage the races and decide on the winners. A rope stretched across the track. Now the time has come when, in a private business, a thorough’ re- organization would be in order. same thing is needed in government. It has taken place, to some degree in city governments. A few states, notably Illinois, have made a begin- ning of it in state government. It has nowhere been done as thorough- ly as would have been the case in a private business similarly situ- ated. If some governor, in some state, The® That was to show the exact spot for | starting and stoppin It was time to begin the race and ; everybody was there but “No. 23.” At last “No, 23” appeared. Every- ‘body looked at his program to see who “No. 23” was. The program said “Markie Muskrat—driving a ‘Hash’ car.” Then they all began to laugh. And really it was no wonder. If you could have seen that car! It was made up of pieces of a dozen wrecked, can set the example of doing it right. or if some administration, in the national government, will go to the roots of things, the example will be contagious, and the achievement will be histori The reforms of the Roosevelt era were moral, political and humani- tarian. The reforms now due are the more prosaic ones of business, But there is idealism in these, too. The cost of governnient has reached the point where it can go no higher. Either the waste must be cut out, or necessary services must be omitted. If we are to have economic, social political, humanitarian, or other idealistic progress, the first step is on the unpicturesque path of effi- ciency and economy. Whoever can lead successfuly in that will be the Roosevelt of a new era. ——_-_—_________» | THOUGHT | | ee ee} Wherefore put aw: lying, speak every’ man ‘truth with his meighbor, Eph. 4:25, - eee Truth is always strange, stranger than fiction.—Byron. Ivory become so precious that anproximately 20,000 elephants are killed annually for their tusks, cars—wheels of one, top of another, engine of another—and so on. And j there sat Markie as proud as Punch. (To Be Continued.) John Quincey Adams. our sixth president, was born in Quincy, Mass, Practical training wi . mae Fractical tratning with tools, mae laboratory especially i ' Siee"trtnings 7" Dance eee Graduates are successful—they re employed in the best carages: STATE AUTO BOX 1316 ABERDEEN, 8.D,

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