The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1925, Page 3

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1925 5, D, GOVERNOR WOULD KEEP ON SELLING GAS Will Endeavor to Bring Out New Aspects of Case and Have Ruling Changed (P) move ply with t order, the chief ex called into. pla could mg ste attitude 11 confer- . made : ust ¢ ne to bri h POLICE CHIEFS OF THREE STATES | a ATN MANDAN j All who have repairs at Folsom’s Jewelry = Store, please call for them. SAYS — NOW STIFF JOINTS MUST GO! true—the world pro- for ubout until it se Appea to jump into your spor' clothes and walk bris 5 just to show the ne s that you ure not as old K that when ordinary remedies fail to limber up the stiff, inflamed rheu- matic joint or reduce the swelling, Joint-Ease suc ceeds. It’s a good stainless pre few month: tude of peopl torted joints ca kinks taken out e, swollen, dis- edily have the them and work for bothersome ee, elbow, ankle, | joint agony Biggest Selling Joint Remedy in the World ~~Adv. Just arrived —a new ship- ment of Fostoria Glass Ware. Bonham Brothers. | rencaaieisaln “The Iron Horse” was shown one solid year at two! dollars admission in New} York City. Watch for it at the Capitol Th Theatre. Never in your life have you’ known anything to compare: with the complete HAPPI- wonderful Es matey shoe. Sold! clus ively by Alex Rosen &, ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Driving Hate Out of The Hearts of Europe long-haired and brigandish in appearance, the other plump and bald, appeared, arm in arm and smilingly, at a brightly lighted window of the court-house of the little red-roofed Swiss town of Lo- carno and bowed to a waiting crow d outside that burst into cheers at their appearance. Another waved from the window a paper tied with ribbon, and the checrs were redoubled. At the same time fire- works blazed against the darkening sky and the encircling moun- tains, and shot their many-colored reflections across the waters of Lake Maggiore. The two men were Aristide Briand, Foreign Min- ister of France, and Hans Luther, Chancellor of the German Repub- lie; and the paper was the just signed security pact which was des- tined to be one of the most famous documents of history. I: THE EARLY EVENING of Friday, October 16, two men, one This momentary picture, sketched in the dispatches of the cor- respondents, in a sense symbolizes the results of the Locarno Con- ference—results which mark, in the opinion of many observers, the dawn of a new era of peace and good - will in Europe. France and Belgium and Germany, the ancicnt enemies, have promised, in ef- fect, never to fight again. And as an earnest of good faith they have signed five treaties and have agreed that between them shal! stand a demilitarized zone along the Rhine which neither will ever cross to attack the other. every phase of this momentous meeting which may mean the founding of the United States of Europe, is reported in “The Liter- ary Digest,” this week’s issue, dated October 31. The article is illus- trated with maps and half-tone reproductions. The Fight Over the “Little Fellows” Income Tax on the matter of taxes to be collected next year from workers who receive less than $5,000 a- year,” reports one observer in Washington. Press correspondents tell us that the Democratic lead- ers in Congress are going to make the elimination of taxes on in- comes under $5,060 one of the chicf issues in the next Congressiona! elections. The fighting Texas Democrat who is responsible for the “Garner plan” of two years ago will lead his fellows, according to a Washington dispatch to the Le mee Union, in attracting the en- thusiasm of “the little fellow” and charging that the Republicans are interested only in “the big fellow.” The New York Herald Tribune’s Te CHIEF BATTLE over the new tax-reduction bill “will be correspondent learns that the Democrats are hoping with such an issue to win a smashing victory in the 1926 Congressional elections, and to defeat President Coolidge for reelection in 1928. Mr. Garner would raise the present exempticns to $5,000 for married men and $3,500 for single men. Other Democrats and prominent Republicans like Senators Couzens and Capper are inclined to agree with the Tex- an, and one of the Washington Star’s political writers concludes that “the liberal wing of the Republicans in Congress is liable to look very favorably upon the $5,000 exemption opposed by Secretary Mellon.” The subject is fully covered in this week’s “Digest.” These News-Articles You Will Also Read in the October 31st LITERARY DIGEST On Sale To-day—All News-stands—10 Cents Congress Enters the Aviation Snarl ‘A Man’s Home Still His Castle Superwages to Meet Super- power A Gloom Wave in England British Labor Bans Communism A Model American House in Paris No Naturally Bad Children. The Mind of an Ape Men and Elephants in Florida Babies I Anenees a’ Million Questions Practical Standard Pictionsey hourly—-prove its wonderful comp school, the: home, the o $6.00, Ful boxed, $7.50. stores or by mail, si Epnk & Waguatl This big handsome eye 6 we te Pe i aa we a. an The Secret of Magnetic Eyes Was Hammond’s Piano “Made in Germany?” What Literary Men Believe in Religion Imitative College Morality The Unfrocking of Bishop Brown American Bombers and Riff Abd-El-Krim is Sultan Mahommed, If You Please | Department of Good English “Go-Get-’Em” McQuigg, the New Head of the Legion Beheading a Forest Giant Help Yourself toa Few Horses How the World Went Mad Over Sandow’s Muscles How Football Fosters Fair Play and Clean Living A Birthday Boom in Wall Street PAGE -PHRED-, COLOR REPRODUCTION, “Canton Street,’’ By FREDERIC CLAY BARTLETT . 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