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a * PAGE FOUR Ap Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Biemarck, ag second class mail matter George D Munn .... President ana Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily vy oarrier, per year Yee Dally vy mail per year Me Bismarck: Nails by mail, per year a stete outside Bisuiacen 2.0U Oally by mail, outside of North Vaso Member Audit Bureau ot Cireul Member on Phe As Hed Ceas tp e lated eres us sel muti “ 1 tion ot alk wews atspa ete fe wie credited tn thes sa 4 } Mo opontanevus origin, shed in hts at moot ' ; Foreign Kepresentatiy JOAN PAYNE COME AN 0 ag, Kresge Bldg PAYS CHAS ANG SMITH Fifth ave tine ai Clly State and Courty Newspaper) Tendencies cf the Age Jessie Lee Bennett in the October Bookman dis cusses “What We Read and Why We Read [i In the openin what is spent raph she contra odities with the pittance that goes into Literature “The United States of Ame yearly produ d ¢ t the only Am that it has sufficient motor « ne tim “The admission tax an people annually tes, “now s mo fornia is te which boast? ry the entir to ear population show that the Amer about $650,000,000° fo picture, and athletic t mad year of 1920 in y purge, moti ertainment In the lich ne twenty two billion do on luxuries, rican wome .600,000 Tor face powder, cost pent § ies, and perfumes alone. “tt is estimated tha pended in this country eac of chewing gum. Recent at least $50,000,000, is ex year for the purel one of the great chewing gum manufacturers announc ret I outlets for the sale of his product eo stirring and enl at startled to learn in our country in which “Considering — the chteninsg 8, one is somew hat there whol great sta there is not one really Nevertheless while s and modern booksto: he pur such as automobiles, chewing gum and comestics mounts into imposing figures, the increase in the manufacture of books has been steady. In 1914 some 175,166,698 volumes of books were printed and in 19 the grand total had reached 359,591,018. The vari- ous kinds of books printed is a cultural index. Books treating of education headed the list in 4 with a total of 96,479,723 and works on general literature came nex Religion and theology cl: more than 48,000 volumes to its credit. While the number of books published seems large disirilution is lim'ted. It is imated that on'y (bout one phold in America out of each 120 neilers books as necessary as radio s of commoditic tion had ts, chewing flivver: Fos Wo steyers. exe utive se ret ry of the Amer ion booksellers’ Asso otion, give. it os his opin Oe. of the publ oes mot buy to) think the cost ua ority doesnt read.” In .oncluding her most interesting article upon the distribution of books, Jessie Lee Bennett : “How would John Adams and his ablest contem poraries exp'ain the strange phenomenon that whe" the country they were founding had 110,000,000 peo ple and reached from the Atlantic to the Pacific; when it had more than one-half the gold of the world and such per capita wealth and standard of living as was never before known among mankind, only about one book per capita per year would be produced or bought by their descendant Are Men Emotional The old question of whether men or women are more intelligent is giving way to the question ot whether men or women are more emotional, The development of laboratory methods of measur- ing intelligence, enabled the ps s to demon- strate that in general tere is no difference between men, taken as a class, and women as a ¢ The id men has persisted. And now psychologists are turn ing r attention to this subject. Dr. Donald A. Laird and Dr, Thomas MeCiumpha of the Psychological Laboratory of Colgate University have undertaken a study of the alleged differences of emotion between gexes, . These two! investigators conducted tests with 600 college men and 400 college women. These tests revealed greater emotional in among the women than among the men. But despite the results of the tests, these two investigators are unwilling to believe the matter as settled and come forward themselves with valid objections to any general opinion based on their own tes First of all, they call attention to the fact that their tests deait entirely with college people they raise the question whether it might not be that women were more emotional than abitity college are the ones who are the most emotional, or to use the investigators’ language, possess th« | combination, they also claim, will be in a position to dictate the price of bread through the control of greatest emotional instability. This is a fact that can be settled only by com parative tests between college and non-college | centers of population. On the other hand, th women. A second question raised by the investigators is whether an emotional difference between men and and in no way an inherent difference. They call attention’ to the fact that almost from birth, the | bakeshop. They have introduced order and system ' training of a girl differs from that given a boy. Laird and McClumpha have also set about investi- paring emotional instability which is so extreme as to result in insanity. They find that in general the ratio of asylum in- ' mates in comparison to population, {s higher for! which bread has come to hold upon the peop‘e. |Those who seek to effect t However, when allowance is made for men whose | who oppose it have raised an i insanity can be traced directly to physical forces) 1 Gun he met with sutis tie men than women. such as accident, shock or social diseases, the 1 ‘becomes slightly higher for’ women. ao Livi wot. tend.to,.ayppert the resalts of the tests with college students. ‘it is a game into w hoarding of supplies used to upset thig historic principle | Rrazil are raising Lot coffee all bec demand, “| rs than babies: Cali- | tri children beat gtr $00 f would have been de innaceat chi | no tole nobody's 1 that he has 990,600 | death, | (Cal) Record. ‘that living cn the present How a traffie sign in a Michigan city res plies one-quarter of the eutire motive power expense than other staples upon an almost univer price: in bacon; ‘but it will buy 120 in ordinary w become a 000 corporation to consolidate the three largest bread-ma impelling national interest. of this poration of bre: corporation of steel or shoes or oil—except that it hi ventions of the traveling oven, the mechanical m:xer and wrapper, and ot! in the last ten modern bakin: was ment and business duce larger plant ef opportune post-war public has reaped no economic not been reduced in proportion and point to the admittedly large ‘made. Prices, they still allow for a reagonab!e return on the money and invested in the industry—-“in London, where bak: ers are satisfied with a re fact that the women who are most likely to go to of bread costs half what it does in New York, ant What is so exett sa world a6 bal | game? Ne a championship that people really care about, but t only is it a dramatic contest in itself to settle ch millions can enter with the thrill of personal experience. Ina myriad of back lots and village commons piring Johnsons and Mathewsons. From the small boys to the bigger ones, and then the young men, and the school and colle ms, and the bush re leagues, the sifting of aspirants out b bes on, Many drop 1; many by their next survive to the top, use their active interest is exhaus more because th outclass: competitors, and fev Rut these few are merely at a goal toward which a million embryo “fans” started with them, And, such is the spirit of the game, the million who dropped by the waysid pusy of the feel no je few who arrived The ideals of the mitlion gination when the world k lots are realized in culmi in season, es the Economics The World War gave economic experts a chance to jockey with the law of supply and demand, Price fixi price stabilization, government nd many other methods wer> A. impossible for statesmen to forget this war h The states of Minas Gaeraes and Sao Panlo in fund to keep up thé price Lin many parts of the world today, it upplies are exceeding the | The world will be mach better off, when it quits ition of this law to prevent the Justice Man's justice is more me XK. Gi Ho than matury ifornia bus driver with a load of in to the er recklessness, ing, and was fined; Nature's penalty, if had heen econd slows for him and many of hi res, Nature takes no excuses and has nee of “honest error.’ Most disasters ave rault | fault, } | In nature's court, the penalty of honest error THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ey ee The Bismarck Tribune Baseball A Bigger Job Than She Anticipated The Tangle Artless Ads Clean dancing at Huntington Beach every night except Monday. Hot musie.—Ady. in Santa Ana Boston Traveler: Striking barbers are of opinion » close a shave, clipped. ee is t er, they would like the hou Vancouver Province: As a warning to jaywalkers ds: “He who ates is tossed. away come Editorial Comment | ot —_ he Of Bread in so (New York Times) teases him d, xecording to a recent investigat.on, sup think cer humen so: iety. hot it should have bee ty pro © a large im f ries 0 g heat in the human organism for a smailer sets the seil of scicuce te. Even at pres lories in milk and 63 one cent will buy 57 ¢ bread. tread is more than a staple food; it symbol of life itself. While man cannot ve by bread alone, neither can he live without +t ° his almost mystical concern of the human ra bread makes the recent announcement of a $490,000, ng concerns already in existence one of RUTH BURKE s done up in cotton I dr brin neve you? y child) jon in com- | 3 old enough | the right e that this mother gave her! such thin; think | Mis at that time| ed he till peopled with | non him to) wa many self, which nec ‘ily was’ the knows, judge of the credentials of its own Walter of big families id this .o me express on nurse tries to I think you had bet- Tam look er come over and give us the once TOMORROW—Letter from ney Carton to John Alden Prescott. Els where in today's New York Times the facts proposed merger are presented. The incor d has come about. just as the in s come later and with prodigious speed. The in- pr bread-making machines have, urs, all but ousted labor from the factory. As each new invention most increased the margin of profit, Efficient manage- presented to soc strategy used this profit to pro- | he more machinery, increased | individus supplemented by the |The, iency, better bread and fr lavis fons—even greater profits. And 000 at corporate indust. itics of the proposed merger assert that the benefit from the (j ckholders | th ad prices have Te! C avings of machine production while st have grown rich, They say that bri fits which the companies have | Step y, could be cut in half and can J made of American wheat at that.” Tho propose from 25 to 50 per cent of the market in the Di’ heat e t few who have incorporated bread have obviously much ated to their credit. They have immeasurably improved . night; supper for mus the technique of production ang reduced industriel i999 and $3000, and then the tips women may not be entirely the result of training | waste. They have substituted a sanitary, laboratory- and the gowns ‘and the jewels and all th Po checked product for the older menace of the cellar formed. sib! ‘ue of great moment suction only if the basi economic facts of the industry are made known | room from the wheat field and the dairy to the kitchen.! proached, thorough investigation by some responsible Gov- ‘nike ernment agency is celle) for, 4 | They must bring the “right” girls Ai goes for stores that credit or s introdue- tion of some pet fashion in a desired ' It’s a great game, th New York desperate |head of the war or navy adminis- The diffe tion of the between the ac- MaeSwiney vernment illustrates was | exe who had elect- te to represent inary government sof the tent Republic of Ireland, exeluded by the assembly it- him | the Per: }. mers ean he action was taken after c n with the actual govern- of Ircland, on its assurance » he she did not represent it and ver been chosen a member. atvala, who was a duly member, excluded international body which happened to be meeting on Amer can soi!, on the ground that he welcome resident of Americ was not coming in that He was coming to the in- onal meeting, to represent tion in whose parliament he sits, without protest from his own 4 n'ry. at* He should have been admitted, on nome I don't want you to come to the principle of diplomatic immu- Otherwis ths Interpar! ary Union can never meet free- anvwhere, if its membership is to be subject to the censorship of the RUTH. | host nation. Syd- | Suppose it were to meet in Con- inople, and Turkey were to clude any American member who a Christian! The postmaster general can not personally fly irplane. Neither can his first assistant, or anyone else in final authority in the Post- office Department. But that does not mean that the rmail is neglected, wrongly organ- zed, or incompetently managed. If the lack of actual flying men at the for in Battle Creek, Los An- installed it reduced the cost of production and sles or ump in wheat and further Wherea savings through large-scale operations followi rapid consolid: now bread takes its place as one of the country’s grez i debutante e critics will be more severe important present ERT, WItAT Do You THINK MAKES A MAN AS_ | BALD AS YOU ARG F HAVES OU QoT: able profit, a pounl{ There pulling, by s well quit. ish decorations Boo ballroom, $500 a ' S all this great city, fill- | ed with wistful n ;4m the process of distribution. It may be claimed [nore mathene than that of a girl of that the financial reward they have reaped is COM” | ¢iations made gating insane asylum figures ag a means of com- | mensurate with the public service they have per-jcrash the social gate. Her parents leannot afford the expense, and her |vanity and determi Charges of inflated prices. profiteering and a pos: to make the bluff. monoply are sez:ous in proportion to the grip I know a very smart young wom- NOWS WHATeEVSR. ALLL KNOW IS THAT HAIRS, UKS SOG CTHER THINGS, WHEN THEY GST TWO (Loose THEY Facc {ff in some girls has to, ation cause her an, connected with a quite exclu-| sive hotel, whose job it is to find merger and those 'out who these girls‘ are and to use to the best advantage. urally the hotel ‘wants the custom of the ,debutantes, both in the tea them “society” be directly ean be shown: the, way. | | EVERETT TRUE BYCONDO | (WE, AST CVS), IF HERS ISN’/T CLD (i BALDY !! ASS du IN TAIS WORL ANY THEORY THAT ILL SXPLAIN IT F | { i | of 4 3% liamentary Un-! k way to do! {Tt is all a part of the adneaut SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1925 | By DR. HUGH S. CUMMING i eee | Surgeon General, United States Public Health Ser {of all the animals which man for food the pig is probably the most voracious. — . Pork, because of its excessive amount’ of fat, has a high fuel val- ue but is difficult for many diges- tions. It should not be served on a hot day. It is heavy, rough food for the out-of-door worker, for the man who, because of the phy’ values. All pork products should be cook- | ed_ thoroughly. Trichiniasi more generally known as trichinosis, is a common’ jand important disease of hogs re :ily communicated to man. It produced by an animal — paras called Trichinella Spiralis, a round worm which lives its life eycle in the hog, in the rat or in man. | It has’ been estimated that from 1 to 2 per cent of American hogs are infected with this par: | Rapid Growth | When infected meat is eaten and j these muscle cells are broken up and dissolved in the stomach, the fi re set free and enter the intestines, where they find condi- vhich favor a rapid growth. | Within two or three days these Jlarvae develop into full grown| la tions worm | bed them | spiral form ‘formation of | usually | fection. Ives y in “month after “in- COOK ALL PORK PRODUCTS THOROUGHLY al effort required by the nature of his work, needs food rich in fuel te These young parasites finally im-| in the muscles, e, take on their! d@ soon begin the st. Cysts occur! | The worms do not persist in the | jnsine for long. They usuaily | | disappear within five or six weeks. A hardening around the cyst in the muscles frequently takes place within six months after the infe tion, Parasites may remain aliv for man Se If the host does not die these parasites will finally be absorsed or themselves become hardened. if they ar sufficient in number, death may take place within a few da he acute form of the disease is serious and is characterized in man y two stages, the first, or gastro intestinal stage, and the second, the stage of general infection. The symptoms of the general in- fection stage are fever and intense n in the muscles. It is esti- mated that the average death rate | for trichiniasis is about one-half of typhoid fever. Pork Sausage Perhaps the greatest danger of all from trichii lurks in pork sausage. Trichiniasis is easily prevented. The organisms can be destroyed and the infection prevented by proper- ly cooking all pork products. A temperature of 160 degrees Fah- renheit kills the parasite. Pork properly cooked, therefore, may be eaten without danger of infection, Fresh pork should be cooked until it turns white. Pork which ig red in color at the center of the piece or near the surface is | not thoroughly cooked. Dry salt pork,” smoked pork and pickled pork, provided the curing process hi been thorough, are, as a rule, safe so far as trichini. | tration n yit means jthing rad | organiz | Prob also that th of our defense for. there i ps who could per- nr-driven ship, or bresk records per: y pointing a 20-ineh gun. | But’ admirals understand — the | probtems of these improvements and appreciate their importa hey are merely bigger way: {doing the old. things. | If the take the same i tude toy the i servi sonal flying skill is not i | eithe son. v is a un ‘Ss game. } Planning niging, whether fof 1 ig else, is an i older me, If val and mili a ‘ flexible enough ; her are they for new problem. niority will work for the it should be abolished the other services air se : or modified for also. pone,” is the rule of diplomacy. ig all t! ment has accomplished. For the present we get the twen- ty millions we were already getting as interest on the post-war debts for goods actually purchased and delivered, and enough more to be jan acknowledgement of ihe rest of | the debt, but scarcely to be a sub- ' stantial payment on it. Since there was no prospect of | getting ny more, at this time, that ‘is satisfactory enough. But it leaves still open. for some future government of both count to attack the real question. Ab 1 that eo, We did ni we hove conceded something hile if we demand payment of any jof it, the French think we have, ex- torted something. the peoples of o un On the fact ey a solution ¢) SIMS NSYSAYS » ns anything like that, © is some- ly. wrong in the whole not a ranking ary heads “What you can't settle, pest- at the French debt scttly- ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS |} BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON ( “My, oh my! T'm_ so 1 Mrs. Bunny wonder who ted to Mrs. Cottontail. s going to win this I shouldn't be surprised if B ny. your husband, won't it,” i Mrs. Cottontail comfortingly. He was ahead a little while ago. “I know,” said Mrs, Bunny. “But they shave only gone around the pond three times and they have to go s The so much dust I can't thing.” r where that little Musk- is,” ighed Mrs. Cotton- suppose that is he away ie tail end, with his fun- ny home-made ear. I wonder whv he ever got into this race anyhow.” “Oh, look look!” screamed Mrs. Bunny. ‘There goes Mister Coon’s yellow racer through the fence. Oh, de T hope he isn’t hurt.” ‘No, he’s climbing out,” said Mrs. Cottontail. “He's all right but there is something the matter with his car, I think. It looks kind vf smashed in front.” “Well,” sighed Mrs. Bunny, “just so long as he isn’t hurt 1 don't care. Bunny will surely win the race now. I certainly hope that Muskrat boy doesn’t come to harm with his rattletrap old car. The dust had cleared away for a minute with a puff of wind and tae gabhtt ladies could see much bet- er. “Well, I declare!” said Mrs. Cot- tontail in an tonished voice. “Rattle-trap nothing! That Musk- rat boy isn’t at the end at all. He’s half way up to the head car. “Where’s Ben?” cried Mrs. Bun- ny. “Oh, there he is. Who's that ahead of him? I do believe it’s that fat Woodehuck person. He knows very well that his wife doesn’t allow him to drive so fast. ‘Oh, dear! I knew it! Th he goes” enough! Mister Wood chuck’s car gave nm bounce fa jbimp! And splash! It landed right in the pond. and if Mosey Mud Turtle hadn't been right there watching the race from a log, M ier Woodchuck mjght have been drowned, But Mosey swam over and saved him. However, that wes the end of the race for him “Thdy’re going around -the pond -hutos, don’t cry at night and for the fourth time,” said Mre doubles do, but autos aren't worth | much after being used 20 years. Experts are unable to determine the origin of grapefruit, so the guilty party may go unpunished. People who live in new fall clothes shouldn’t eat ice cream cones. space and ends with a crash. The same is true of a meteoric career. are awful over there, but could be worse. Suppose boll weevils got in their whiskers? report profits from crop pools, un- less there are sharks in them, | They haven't so much fun ain Washington since the oil boom there, apple cider. When you get home the keyhole may be gone. Among the very important things going on now are fall hats. No matter how big a telephone booth, it is hard to get numbers in it. Acting sensible ander the harvest moon is just showing your ignor- ance. It is hard to be brave when no one is looking. Life has its ups and downs. And (going up really is more fun than | going down, Few are satisfied with their lot unless it is a lot of luck. \ Friday is considered unlucky by some people, but then every day is considered unlucky by some people. In Africa they rub noses instead | of shaking hands. That is becoming | the custom at our dances. | (Copyright, 1925, NEA, Service, Inc.) | Farmers from various sections Be very careful about drinking Bunny. “Just two more times left. : Hurry up, Ben,” she called as lond- ly_as she cou'd, and waving her ears wildly to attract her husband’s at- tention. ‘Hurry up.” ; “Bang!” | “Something blew up,” said Mrs. ‘ Cottontail. “There! (Mister Porcu- {pine is slowing down. He’s had a puncture. Now he’s out too!” A meteor usually flies through’ ‘Ben's shead! Ben’s ahead!” ; Sereamed Mrs. Bunny jumping up and down in her excitement, and waving her ears and arms and en- ' Bad news from Russia. Things: tirely forgetting that she was a dig- nified lady bringing up a family, | “Oh, look at that’ Muskrat boy,” shouted Mrs. Cottontail loudly so as to be heard above the racket. “Someone should put him in his | place. He is ahead of everybody | but “your husband, Blossom. ¥ shouldn’t have it. He will ruin everything. The idea of allowing an old junk heap like that in the race. There! Will you please look at, that! They are even! Exact- ly even, and only one more time around ' the pond to finish the race!” “Indeed, I shan’t have it,” de- clared Mrs. Bunny crossly, “I'll have Ben put him’ out right now. Ben! Ben Bunny, come right here. I want you. I want to tell you something.” But Mister Bunny ‘neither saw nor heard. He was doing his best to keep ahead of Markie Muskrat’s little ratle-trap of a car, but inch by inch Markie was gaining. One lap around the pond—half a lap, a quarter, ten feet! The race was over'and’ Markie Muskrat had won it. (To be continued.) 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