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renee CRORE tees PAGE FOUR _ The Bismarck Tribune iin” Aa Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST } (Established 18 WSPAPER Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at/ dividual citizen. Bismarck, ag second George D Mann ss mail matter. Iption Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per yes . $7.20) font, Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... 7.20 | Dally by mail, per year | (in stat outside Bismarck)......... a Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota...... 09 A . Member Audit Bureau of Clreataiton | Editorial Comment Member of The Associated Press 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 the local news of spontaneous origin published her fn. AU rights of republication of all uther matter herein are also reserved. Forelgn Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DE G. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldz. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - 5 Fifth Ave, Bldg. (Offic! al Clty, State and Courty Newspaper) entists Fall Out President and Publisher and | difference between a city that is stifling ; just what it take isn’t to make a matte population, more factories, a new rail | road or a deeper harbor place. Because it imply a ting more It is something deeper something that depends on the individual heart and conscience of the in It can't be expressed in dollars | for steel few really worth while things can; but it makes t }to intellectual and moral development and one that | | The $100,000 Bible | ‘ ; | (Seattle Post Intelligencer) | A London connoisseur has paid $100,000 for a | the Gutenberg edition of the Bible. ‘This | | on, published in 1453, is extremely rare. It is | of the very few existing specimens of the first volume ever printed from movable type. It recently came to light in the Melk monastery in) Austrit, j Where it: had reposed for more t ) three cen- j taric | the purchasey will not read this Bibie, Me glasa case at it for a while, then lock it up in Some ys ws henve, when is dea When S auctioneers will have another chance and mi When scientists fall out hon 1 oe sets her} reap the commission ona lar um than due. $100,000 Man has been alin 1 onatare 1 lor It is mot an excessive price. Any copy of the tine and has been th of it it, Bibte is worth $100,000 to a man that reads ity and agit ) no copy is worth anything at all to a man that doe: Pseudo scientists, it also vet pen pass: | not ing half truths on to anxious humans wie don't know the difference and who have accepted blindly, | Northern Trop Thus have been built) up fic myths, (Nortolk Daily News) declares John Langdon Davies, tie brilliant Tiere has long been current in the Canadian isher, who sounds t HL ta wa is book, rthwest a tradition ef a tropical valley in Norti Now Age of Fai [ern British Columbia, Now, it’ is reported, two Arion t major casualties are the dJukeses {aviators have penetrated tie wilderne prospect und the es, those famed biological speci, ug for gold, ond have actually come upon such a mens on preachers. of mportance of Walley, Giant t¢ bush grass, blooming flowers, heredity Jong rested their case ii patch of potatoes and onions, planted a year Others to be shot at sunrise include Lothrop )age by an prospector, ted their sight, Stoddard, with his theories of Nordie supermac There isnt anything mysterious bout this valley Albert Kdward Wiggaim, who o entific sele isn’t a dett-over from ancient days when the tion of parents for breeding a super race, and Madi | North i to have had a tropical climate. n Grant, exponent of similir views valley is warmed from below, not from above. Davies, after exploding the “Nordie myth,” rises) is full of hot springs which send clouds of steam to ask just what type of human they would manu | ap into the air, warming the whole sheltered region facture, What type is te the preference and! and it with abundant moisture for vege on what sound basis can nee be estab: | tation lished? If left to the selectionists, he points out.| Now it is up to someone to discover a self-refrig many of the world’s greatest would have to be ruled) efating valley down in the torrid zone the sickly out. ‘There was Dostoievsky poleon; the and Po and Steven Crane and Darwin and Newton und Sp Would Jack movie beauties he preferable, he epileptic Keats and Stevenson ot nee Dempsey and a couple inquires His banner is raised in behalf of environment an democratic beliefs. The democratic theory has chance to save itesil, but the slate must be wiper clean of bunk and a fair chance given It human not re environment that stands in the way of full n, he t with the individual creature, but with prop Tinto v must edom of opportun' cultural sphere; a expre) erts er control of the w born The amount of fr creature i certain he the to stry give an enlargement breaking dowa of handicaps The accidents of geography, poverty and cireum ances are all-powerful, he argues. Had Mr, Wig gam been adopted by an African chiet at the age of tvo he would not have known how toowrite, the author protests “Local Immunity” immunity,” “Local 1 new principle ntist working at the Pasteur Institute ; many the physicians in fighting germ disea sredka is the Russian’s name. many germs attack specific part tly only when introduced into revolutionize method of used: by Dr. A covery the body and that part of the body He took anthrax germs and infected guinea pigs with them © placing of the least fluid contain germs in a minute scratch on the guines brought death. — Howey dose much greater than those believed nec ing ese pig's skin » when y to cause death were injected into the guinea pig’s lungs or ether organs, they had no effect at all. Besredka believes in many > body wh that his experiments show diseases it is only a cretain part of h is attacked. He believes therefore must be fought by the introduction of an antitoxin or serum at this particular point den the name of “local immunity” for his theory. Ho claims, for example, that it administer typhoid antitoxin by m. Typhoid being a « nid be fought by point, he claims. Further the dised is a mistake ty injection in’ the > of the intestinal tract, injection of antitoxin at thi experiments i being planned at. the Pasteur Institute to test the validity of this theory Concerning Indians The poosibility that the American Indian is the descendant of tribes that originally roamed the | plains of China is brought forward by research! work done by Dr. Edward Sapir, Canadian an-, thropologist and language expert. Dr. Sapir says at he tinds a marked sim y between the original primitive Chinese dialects and the dialects of the American Indians. This would lead him to belic Indians* were descended from their way from Chi s ica by way of Alaska in the da: connected the two continents, he says, that the tribes which made iberia and into Amer- when a land-bridge 3 Now Going On Ween te St. Lawrence waterway is constructed we will probably find plenty of ocean ships ascend: ing to the Great Lakes, taking cargoes from Chi cagdy Detroit, Cleveland and other ports to places | on the other side of the world. thing. But it won't be altogether new. Ocean ships hav@penctrated to the lakes before this. Two ships have. cleared from Cleveland for London this year, for éxample, and others have called at Detroit. FS Local Patriotism One encouraging thing about American life is the intemse local patriotism of most citizens. Nearly every man you meet is always ready to defend his hone city or town, and.on occasion to do al] he can to make it a better place. ‘Téo often, however me. fail.to have a good un- It will be a great nd Na | The problem does} discovered by | | Willing to Pay For Good-Roads (Valley City Times Record) given going According to fig way department, it is of program this res from the State High to take dollars to Dakota for will be paid by he however, A few ago spending of Isuch a sum would have caased almost @ panic in the ranks of the Laxp: in the neigh- the orhood million three put over the year National th in he by nent, years Ts, but today it is different. | Most every farmer in the country now operates a | moto car, both fer farm trucking and for marke jing and pleasure purposes, In ail the years that jhe has had to plow through mud with a wagon or loess to et to his ling point he ha rcepted Vine conditions with a stoical air, but now that he | Jean get to town with an auto in one-fourth of Un time, and make four times the is looking at the i different light day. he matter of not grumbl jxoed roads to travel over and i good road 1g if he can g willing to pay tor built efficiently and economéc He distance in the same! in line roads if they arc jally. Many farmers of course cannot be on good roads at the present time, but they can get onto ‘good roads in short distances and get to the main ! jtowns these de The time is coming when all [tain section roads are going to be either paved or graveled and all farmers will be able to « to town, rain or shine. It will take many years to accomplish this, but we are getting many f | good graveled roads year by year. It is going to take millions and millions of dollars to reach this | stage of good roads for all, but it is coming and jit is xoing to be the greatest boon to all. jcost Wil be great, but this cost will be passed on | trom one generation to another, so why should we | worry?) It is worth much more to us and to you to j be able to travel in comfort without having to get {hauled out of a mudhole whe more to you pay some get yourself in taxes for one up -if you do not pay will come along and get for something else-—they will get it about taxes for good roads? car oor farmer than back town road for good roads your | | to you pay year for purposes, Cheer somebody money so why worr Red Grange’s Foot Slips (The Milwaukee, Wis., Journal) With the opening of the football tourney, with frost on the pumpkin and cider in the cella | out to see Mr. Grange go tw to touchdow But in the other gentleman, known in h ir, and in those ‘a star himself. i jesty to. si home town as Ed parts considered something of And though it might be lese ma that Mr. Grange had met his match, |e ee bate like everything.” ;{t ean be said safely that when Mr. Grange had gone | “some people like to talk a lot," (five yards he had made his run. jsaid Mister Corn Dodger rely. | Pkcuses. op coumme: are ating ea neq |"That may be true, but the 3 of, course, “are pelng made. for Meili swer to che rigdieigaout, GOA rang lure to rec] off 50 yara ‘spurts. It was | Goat!” j his off day, the field was s« and 8> op. We re-| ,. 1 Bnow anpthervong Uke it,” said) Feall that excuses also were plentiful when Minne- 4" |sota stopped the mighty Grange last year. Rel j Grange, from all we have heard and seen, is not jonly a good sportsman and a dandy football player |but a very decent chap to boot. He simply has not been tre s. They have dingdonged Grange, Grange, until one would come to the conclusion that the other 10 men imply out on the gridiron because the rules call for 11 men. ed fairly by the newspap Grange, the Notre Dame team of last year who protested against this thing of singling out individuals and building up myths about their prowess. He made Some tart remarks in behalf of the other men down in the line who stood the brunt of the attack and who must first open a hole for the man with the ball to go through—as was demonstrated sa con- vincingly in the case of Mr. Grange Saturday. We expect to see Red Grange in some spectacular play- ing this fall. He would be an addition to any man’s squad. But it is worth while. to be reminded that football, unlike billiards, is not a one man game. It was one of the famous “Four Horsemen” of | tow | Vaave else on earth you we | If the “respec thousands pass a foot away every |) KSD (545.1) 9—-Musical program. Mave te woman he cared for more than all | will once make = day, He is as secluded as a) monk.| KTHS (374.8) 10—Dance tunes. The . | teble, the police can cope with the And so I asked one of tha fellows WHO (526) 11—Midnight dance ctl Marquise, Twill prob-| disreputable one ithe other day what he did to occupy | program. te you again until T z cpap his. mind. VU WDAP (365.6) 11:45—Nighthawk ‘ from Ruth's. #n the) Charges are made and denied that) "Swell, 11 tell you, 1 dow't | Frotie, ntime, do not censure me for the | the negro crew of the burned steam-' ag nothing but study human natu Mountain Time losure L have made to you this/er Comanche were drunk and in he answered. instance, "Tet KOA (3224) 8—-Studio program. rning. Every 1 or woman on| competent. Let us be generous and ject you're a newspaper. 1 Do Pacific Time homust ha ymeone ome accept the denials rather than the you know why I think that? You! RPO (428.3) 8 Vda Waldrop organ ting for x confidant. Ihave chosen |caarges. ‘The situation, even them Aiways got three or four newspapers | recital, vu for mine. 7 illustrates n condition ‘on the set Gader your arm. When you. pass | "KGO. (361. Sducational pros ! LESLIE. | which landsmen should appreciate. ‘this’ booth you're always peeking in | [ams (Copyright, 19 A Service, Ine) | These negroes were not hired be: to see what You can sec, Every liprogtamd ed and lo » TOMORROV er from) Pr they were particularly fod time you look up at the clock to see 11—Orchestral selec- \5, cilla Bradford to Mrs. Mary Alden or because the owners of the what time it is, All newspapermen L wonder t ever ty a real Prescott. }Comanche loved the negro e rubbernecky like that. aaa See es ta were hired because they were |“ “«gay, 1 could tell you more good ise and for no. other | r9i stories’ than you'd ever print,” he NTURES Mister Dodge “Does anyone else | Ships on other ogeans ize wghiness; continued stont to ask know a riddle 7 Lascars, or Gurkas, for the same \pothe: cht bout. his V E. “T know one,” said } “How do | Pane he urge is to seck ever, snether Meee lady whe the TWINS 9h ee oa, outs ore thats oon for whomever is cheap) stops’ to talk to me every time che zs But nobody could guess that ant. Pee onal a. She's “pratty ‘Ly one ROBERTS BARTGL | shall tell you. “By spelling is th only protection against th con-'fomward in what sa thes ou an “tm”? i dof an “h. sequences of this situation, and it ticgiar in. me. She's just. curiou isk riddles,” said Na Really Twins were having |i an inadequate one. And yet, at thats all, because she ean. only ro) ‘The; un rox of | fine*’time i Bighed nks Land. moment, the safety of Wounds ig din fica lahore fi j ¢ eC of valuable lives may- depend on the} * dp, vi i ; ye (Copyright, 1925 intelligence, courage, skill and char- nae any Henne eee _Almost anything can happen some- Do. vou. kr ra acter of crews selected for none of i 4 p times. In Mexico, a man was shot | Corn Dodger Te anike ovemnan aa ania through “here, and he “never “once| by gecident. “Lots, : tent in the United S ary |" ‘The cost of labor is the smallest plopped for change. He always had] Parr know one. No—1 know two. Kees who invented machine for element in the operation of a hip, | is nickel] ready. 2 en ODS Ne 4 We had just about forgotten Ar- i ell, that's a begi "| weaving a mixture of silk and|ut it is the one which arouses the| fe e me a new twenty-dollar bill jyistice Day until we saw a man wear- lsaid Mister Dodge Theos r a as te one We the price of |t_ change. He did that for five! ing a welet watch. going to have some threads Tost _ excitement. fi straight mornings and 1 got. sus- oor everybody, please, be seated | melons. 1 pad, one of the us oxi] It is estimated cigurets have burn- 1 y’ | amined and it w ater I) ed too many holes in shirts. iter atten Mumnts, Dunes sors PW ERETT TRUE BY CONDO _ | [fount out"he ‘vat tastier or a tank a taleas | so he couldn't tell another. “Sometimes I think I'll write Missing California mesenger with | are Crow whispered to the some of the things I st , $5,000 was caught in Georgia. That [Sweep, it was the worst he'd evi {AND IMA VERY INTERESTING tens out of it even without writ-|was carrying things too far. pont said Mister Dodger, | | KOO PER CENT. ise Ee RASG? BUT About the worst streak of luck t | Sy ; agers AMERICAN ALSO VERY What has happened to the derby | day is a Chicago man whose rich aid, “Whyt round | ’ = hat, the old lly”? It has b i i i INDEFINITE. j hat, the old “iron kelly”? It has wife is asking for a divorce. | ried all the High | ‘eome so rare on Broadway that a \Jinks people together. “Th te man wearing one becomes a mark of| Mohammedans believe there are Oh, ig it?” ‘ ‘attention. Not one man in a thou-j| ten animals in heaven and some peo- {you're wrong. It isn't a sand here wears a derby. ple will think all ten are hound dogs. ’3 a goat.’ i Karl Kitch ee nbhar oa . Se éWell, 1 declare!” sald othe § | arl Kitchen is rather anxious} In New York the other day, they we nets ate ies jto know why ladies of the chorus | imported some imported cheese in- Rah 1 wear pink tights. And Robert G stead of making it in the United know something else that goes round | lert tells him that it is for the same | States, ° fii | G jshouldn’t know myself if [ hadh't looked it up in the dictionary. | But min you, the Wise-Man-Of- jou fown\knew. “A butt said | he, “is a sort of tower that s out i i Red |! Grange went down to cefeat. Thousands had turned Ks ng down the field | seen them myself. ebraska line was an-| 4 huttin’, toe lasked Mister Corn Dods | merry nod, which made the fla: ‘her starched ‘flop like wings. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | A Glutton for Punishment / / y VA ONE WOULD | 7 | TRINK THAT Para y WOULD GET HIS ‘ FILL OF THAT / SOMETNE A heard, LE TER worn a IE re THE 8! would not have President the Coolidge to final Me appen and jigion a a remnant to whem the only i \is that provided for the hb believed pp whatever you by the h might be so 1 do!” that-—a “What's wh. Crow, He o, sir, 1 don’t know Said ‘the Scare ows old daddy. sheep. can butt you could have heard a pin drop. For nobody wanted to miss a word when there was a riddle go- ing_ on.” “What is a buttress?” asked Nan- Nobody knew that, of course. I on a fort or castle. see in any direction “That's right,” saic It helps you to Nancy with a ” white cap go flippit: “But there is an- other kind of buttress, Can you guess that?” “Give up,” said one High Jinks person after another. “What other kind of buttress is there?” “A \Nanny-goat,” said Nancy. “I could \just laugh myself to death,” said ‘the Wise Man, which meant that he couldn't do any such thing. He was completely disgusted to think that he couldn't guess an easy, riddle like that, But. all the others did laugh heart- ily. “That was a fine riddle,” said ' inetion for obe- DISEASE IS OLD, THOUGH TREATMENT IS NEW MING = | ed States abdomen. Sometimes it is shorter than three inches, and specimens have been found that were between six and 11 inches in length, About 1886, the year in which the appendix was first recognized as the | Surgeon Public Health Service endicitis | an| Many people consider # comparatively new dis ailment that up to a generation. se | heard of. Appendicit seat of va diseases of the abdo- {# the human race. I: was| men, the gr French bacteriologist, }simply known by another name, or| Louis Pasteur, was conducting his jrather by y of other names, studies of the ca of the disease. before it ed that the lit-| He found that living germs were tle organ called the appendix was| responsible for many infections of causing all the trouble jthe human body and proved that The first accu J definite! germs were the agents which causea jdescription of this disease was given | disease. ' ‘by Dr. Reginald Fitz of Boston in| The discoveries of Pasteur were { 1886. Previous to that time the| taken advantage of by Lister, the jMedical profession did not regard | father of modern surgery, who ap- the appendix as the seat of any dan-| plied his principles of cleanliness |gerous disease. and strict aseptics to all operations, It is perfectly true that before|and revolutionized surgery. | ses, due to disease of the | Previous to this time surgical ope- ad been opened and drain-| rations were attended with great ed, but the appendix had not been | risks because of the infection which removed and the operation did not/sct in after the operation. Now, volve any extensive opening of the | however, these infections have ceased dy cavity. In 1885, hovever, an|to appear and surgery has been operation for appendicitis was per-| brought to a stage that is compara- formed, an appendix removed, and/ tively patient lived until 1919, in no| The germs which cause appen affected by the removal of that|dicitis may enter the appendix organ, through the blood or through the in- In order that you may understand | testines, with which the appendix is something of the nature of appen-| connected. Apparently these germs | @icitis, it is first necessary that you| may originate in distant parts of the j know something about the appendix. | body, in the tonsils, in bad tecth, | You should know that man is the stomach. . the few animals The structure of the appendix appendix, such that it favors infection. The | We do not know that is a great deal of tissue which may useful function. It has asily become swollen, thus shutting a rudimen organ. Some people | off the 1 and allowing the ma- believe it is simply an organ that has terial retained to decompose and 'deteriorated from lack of use, until | produce in mation. jit is now but a vestige of a once ac-| It may be said in general that any j tive and important part of the body.) condition which tends to interfere | The vermiform appendix is a fin-| with the drainage of the appendix | xer-like appendage about three inches | into the large intestine is of impor- one of having a vermiform or_in it has any been called lin length and a quarter of an inch in tance in causing appendicitis. F idiameter, having a canal running drainage of the appendix is essen throughout its entire length. It is! to the healthy condition of the inc situated ut the end of the cecum, or | vidual and the retention of any ma- large intestine, just below the point | terial in the organ y produce in- | where the small intestine opens | flammation. jinto the large intestine. It is! The treatment of an attack of ap- |found in the lower right side of the | pendicitis is surgical. coal goes up, that is unfortunate,| general manager of the Mandan b understandable. If the price of | Creame and Produce | company. labor goes up, that is “an outrage.”| There are more but smaller flocks It arouses real moral indignation,| in the state this r, Mr. Russell An advance in price will bring jand a holy : rmers practically the same re- | termost to fight it to the ut- | says, he result is a lower and | [lower standard of competence in| turns as last year, however. jerews, For P enger boats, at be least, a better class of men should be fo “Rigoletto,” grand opera, and sev- ater programs are featured to- among the best broadcast of- r come this aay 4 he real it easy for me to become dienee to law. will help, for) Eastern Time ident) even ny those who —acknowle; religion, WWI (352.7) 8—-Orchestral — pro- The country would be better off if iam. there were more who did so. ' New York, Nov. #.-What does a]” KDKA (309) 9--Musical progran But there is no religion in| the! subway money changer think about?| WEAF (492) 10--Grand opera, “Rig- bootlegsing trade, and 1 nough He sits in a little booth down under | oletto.” Rebroadeast by . I try ‘to m imong, the bootleggers’ customers. the ground and from his place be-|WJAR ( I do not know For thé bootlezgers, the only remedy hind the wicket passes out nickels | (469', W dney Carton has ;is fear of the penalties of the law. for the turnstile slots. Usually he| WCAE (4613) 11—Theater — pro- > woman on this} For their customers, the is in a dark shadow while those who | gram, never told this must be to religion, for tho stop before the booth are in a light Central Time ny word or look or |! it alty to their coun- that falls full into their faces. There] WGN (370 6:30—Dinner con- » difference. Ta jtry and its, tutions, for those js nothing personal in the transac- | cert. it, Little rquise, | whose devotions are confined to the tion of passing out five nickels for} WLW (422.3) 8—-Symphony orche: ideci) Hone TArcOet aAve mundane sphere. ‘Then there will be one quarter. It ean be done without | tra, 1 word being spoken. hind thew The man be- et is a shut-in, though WOS (440.9) 8 and music Old-fashioned song concert. WHAT Do Mou DON’T SAW) WHICH ONG OF THE CIEMERS |Feason firemen wear red suspender: The hallmark of success in New York, it seems to me, is to live in al roof bungaiow. Of ‘course, nobody n afford to pay the rent on an !ordinary bungalow in Manhattan. One of the latest roof bungalowis! is Patterson McNutt, quondam new paper reporter and now a playwright. JAMES W. DEAN. « If jazz music isn’t dying it ought to hush, (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Use Gas. It’s the Scientific Fuel. Mew A THOUGHT * Speak ye every man the truth to his neighbor.—Zech, 8:16, Truth is strengthened by obser-} vation and time; pretensés by haste and uncertainty.—Tacitus. ' ———____._. | MANDAN NEWS |, Funeral services for the late Edj Schmidt were held Sunday afternoon in St. Joseph church, Father Clement officiating. Burial was at the local | Catholic cemetery. A motion for arrest of sentence and for a new trial for Ted Loran, con- vieted Thursday of maintaining a common nuisance and sale of intoxi-| cating liquor, will be made before} Judge Thomas H, Pugh in district! court tomorrow by Attorney. A. T. Faber, counsel for defendant. Ly ARTI = It’s the The North Dakota turkey’ crop is nloonlight 80 to 40 per cent smaller this year fellow CHAT tiene paar than last according to H. 8. Russell, ! knows ‘he-doesn't-menn, . /