Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE « ; 1 A an | — The Bismarck Tribune |, Swrifice Necesary Back on the Rock Pile Au Independent Newspaper | * on ous? On the Germany paid another in na = ies France found itselr yle to pay the next install Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ment on its own internal debt Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Roth ‘the German: ana Frenen governments Bismarck, ag second class mall matter. , nie eat Seiices. EOIN UWEIE: READIES George D Mann .. President and Publisher [!'e) eect preat sqenmtcs om th peoy ee —~ othe German vovernment has the advantage of Snbseription Rates Payable tu Advance ¥ its people that these sacrifices are Datly by carrier, per year ores . of detent, and dat. for a whole Datiy by mail, per year (in Bismarck)..... } rane sicily caaat fies Daily by mail, per year ferns must work: harder ane v Qn state Gutside Blstmare' §.00 at peoples to recover from) war Datly by mail, ontside of North 6.00 French ernment has tousk its peaple es puch tie same thing as the price of victory Member of The Associated Press Hoth are doubtless necessary, put the one is much The Associated Press 13 exclusively entitled to the coer far the people to understand, ‘The hard dis use for republication of all news dispatches credited || \ terifiee ig the only hope of Kurope, De to it of not otherwise credited In this paper, aud alse ' i wea the Ge ; ital the local news of spontaneous origin published Ler’ ies prepared the Germany to make i fn. All rights of republication of ali other matter uerein ure alvo reserved, oe Good Advice Forelgn Representathves ty Otto Th Kah peaking to drama lovers at GQ. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY q $ Heaters outside of New York to CHICAGO Ra ‘ rselves from Browdway.” Tower Bldg. Kreage Bldg i ound advic so Jong as our theat | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH und advice. So long a ur theater = 2 . ifth Ave, Bldg. pend on Broadway sne Broadway write NEW YORK = = _ —_— troadway aet - the © cannot expec (Offictal City, State and County Newspaper) ty jave a virile American And that isn't * = . rep 7 a Kiet Broadway, either; GUS just that Broadwa Man Conquers Fears, But One Remains imnot pretend to speak for the entire nation The history of the i we zation has heen Interest in the drama is reviving. Soon, it mia the history « i euch city will have its own company pre Pie Aine HE ans used he ome grown’ offering ail a " her \ the darkne — fear oft ' ear ol nd, fear of evil spirit Railroads Q ' ! d izards cing we The cistern section ef the country has witn eur of fear of others tribes Mee Tl a) disu-trous train wrecks during the last few One by one, these ¢ were shaken off. 4 ‘ chiefly to remind us, not of the dan- emerged from Uieir ex and rude into pers of railroad travel, but of its safety, Compared towns or open villages a fering of with the hundreds of passengers carried yearly, the edearned that evil spirit) did rid nmiel of life on the rairoads is very small, t ry the nivdt wind, after ab that wird wath their pocus tricks we oO tore, Uae fie Tot Stove Baseball League will resume its clever ju that up to date weapons made Will seasion just a oon as the Jast footbal game has animals harmle been played us fear subsided, men began to diser that omethings more than a round of entity vi y ng to go SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1925 BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING Surgeon General, U, S. Public Health Service | The nose and throat in are concerned the elaboration ‘of The nose and throat nost important because of their tionshi h the organs of nu- n and assimilation. They are the channels through which food and air onsively land t ure is the organ by ppreciate odors. in the act of anne] through of which we of importance bresthing. It is ae Which the air passes into the bedy, and it prepares that air for admission to the lungs. Any injury to the nose; any resulting deformity; any cha ‘brought about by disease 1 fere with one or more of these fune- tions. It frequently happens that defor- mities of the nose may be present ut birth, Sometimes deformities re- sult from injury. The mucous mem- brane lining the nasal passages may become inflamed to such an extent that the passages are closed, and breathing through the nose becomes impossible. | This mucous membrane which [lines the nose is of importance, be- cause of its relation to health. That affection, which you, for want of a {better name designate as a “cold in the head” is in reality an acute in- jflammation of the lining of the nose, and is caused by micro-organisms. |The true name of this condition of |cold in the head is “rhinitis. Cold alone does not produce this condition. Rhinitis, or head cold, is |generally an infection, and results from the entrance of some germ into |the tissues. If one is exposed to cold for a long time, and the resisting powers of the body are reduced by ‘this exposure, the blood supply in the jtissues is diminished, and the small | blood vess contract. When the jnasal tissue has been weakened and | rendered less resistant, disease germs, which are ulways present about the that cometh over the sexes before m Ivery eyes and to pondering what i {hefalling the virile he-man. Saw great crowds trying to turn night into day, particularly of Sature day nights and they do tell me that SAYS INFECTION EVEN MAY AFFECT BRAIN nose and in the mouth, take advantage of the opportunity to attack the mem- brane and produce an inflamma- tion. A cold in the head may spread to other regions, and may even invade the brain itself. Of course the micro- organism which is responsible for the trouble has a great deal to do with the greater part of the inflammations that are grouped under the general head of colds. Commonly these in- are of relatively low virulence und have little power to cause much inflammation but some- times organisms of more virulence attack the nose and adjacent struc- tu and we have severer symp- While colds differ in many minor details which only specialists in dis- of the nose and throat can recognize, they are, as a whole, much ike, and even the most simple nasal ions may prove to be dangerous. A cold in the head deserves your attention. Don’t neglect it, because in itself it is dangerous, and second, because it may develop into a chronic inflammation, and may even cause such changes in the structures of the nose as to leave that organ in a more or less permanently injured condi- tion, The best immediate treatment for colds is to remain in bed or at rest whenever possible. You should take a mild laxative, and eat moderately of good simple wholesome food light in character. You should see to it that you have plenty of good fresh air to breathe, and remember, above all things, that a cold in the head is not to be considered lightly. If not properly and immediately treated, 2 head cold may result in one or many serious complications. At the season of colder weather special care should be taken to avoid conditions which produce head colds. Keep your rooms well ventilated. Do not live in an overheated, dry atmos- phere. The humidity and tempera- ture of your room plays an important Part in the prevention of colds. tion. The spindle of one of the front wheels snapped, the machine erved into the ditch and came to u ‘op upside down. The ear was badly damaged. nd shee ne Some me te poems, AP G y . und Sl nd " poem Editorial Comment on a recent night after a footba!l others { heautitut states ar built imposine \ IN game more than 20,000 people were! ufldings or devoted their energi ihe disk ath . turned away from leading night clubs, making mankind's losd of pain and toiy a dite What Sort of Cooperation \ U for lack of SRACE. ins We pean. | ehter (Grand Forks Herald) i a ae ' y With each generation came tie discovery that Senator-designate Nye, in a pleasant little talk to ‘Urges Authority | another fear could be discarded. 1 was found that | the newspaper boys in Washington, announced him | New ‘You%, See-sawing up | For Granting of Was not necessary to sacrifice living beings to | self ay the friend of the farmer, which is very hand: | nd down 1 saw Korte | 3 7 ; . arle, he who pla he great Woo! Mita {dole In tind of plage: the adctar an | som of hos, und montlonea as among the noods ot | Se aaa ase cade Grazing Permits) <i, rums could ibe relied on instead, Nor was it the farmer the promotion of cooperation. He noted the rising of that new giant, the jee Washington, Dec, 5 (AP)~-Preser- | for Christmas presents to keep skirts ary to fear the devastation of rivers in spring L regret that in North Dakota, in spite of the need, r. | York fe Building, on the site of ne | vation of the grazing resources of the; Short another year. ! i old dison § harden, eit e Deraes _ canals could be built and the surplus water! there had been a falling off in interests in coopera | your they do tell of how his people back De ctine tHe irene Jerulatien | ‘All this Mitchell talk about war is used to make barren lands fertile (tion, and he felt that the government should do some: | than I in Norway wished him to fo-low the permits by the government, wie, disquieting. We might get the same . I tho puld yo dire sea as had so many of his count urged in the annual report of William ,toP sergeant next time. We find it rather absurd, nowadays, to think of thing about it, - Prescott. and then 11 1 men, but, instead he came to America | ged [2 ye annual report Caner! ome of the things our ancestors shuddered at It mey be that Mr. Nye had in mind as aaa , foo sh it wou t spend four or and followed the sk: lin aa the wit | Land Office, made public today by Sympathy great stuff, unless it fi hich th 1 whiet jtive movements the various movements which were ! knew be wo , ( room of vill Rate, v pom veal ed fh Sout Secretary Work |makes yeu want more of it. tut there ane fey which they ne wilike we i . had to have an in keep with the cap” when ie went abo 1 a we i : sed wi oko wey had which Wel jromoted hy Mr, Townley in the early days of Me Standing with: hie writing songs. And having aequired(,,!#@ Commissioner ulso proposed} 91, = ality SH share with them; a fear that even mow has not i! 3 anding: with hi writing songs. An a the repeal pf the stock-raising home- Inly one more umbrella and two a "i caval . Nonpartisan league, such as Col Stores, | You dear, P remember i some money thereat he attracted the | ead act, amendment of the general | Pair of gloves until spring. been shaken off, or even greatly weakened : Pwhat ti oie hia i her iyfspenk. attention of Bernard Baruch, the fi- cls mile doles pests . banking enterprises, news, enterprises, amd $0 %¢ iy : - rs rer Awd | homestead law to permit delay in a And that fear is man’s fear of man 3 . he past. Po wonder women a i neier und political figure.’ And it{Romestead law to permit delay in| 1, New York, when a man wakes up We have harnessed the lightning, tamed the tides, [forth If it was these es that Mr. Nye ha the older generation hive nasty |e vou, related that Baruch” showed the sry iishment for shot he wonders if it was his wife Ve have harnesses e , tamed the tides, | : ‘ res ns i yest friends - write vw to play Stree eae Fi shed: evil aplttt la fi 0 Ffin ind he was quite right in saying that there "ind GuRlin, SocadechenC ae natch that } would not, wher ‘Ron hilly. racine Tina Htion, and increase in the are: or a burglar. lined: our tat witch? hue SUll We ay of | Wd been kening of interest in them, In fact, Fu my independence for any man on | cially, even as the Rose, and now will Maybe sold at public auction Reading the New York didpatehes Mea ee ee pit would not by mich to say that interest in after all, f think her firstJearth under the circumstances, |b Popen ht club in Kifth Avenud {ay acreage of publie land totaling’ indicates her great white way is really men. i : li H mej ready to er; in| patterned after the famous Londons, on ri her great fight wa i rit till true that oppression and injusti {these concerns ties vanished allogether, except on ‘i eda um me, | Rit = Hee? ; al tte salons bis ) s sti e oppression anc stice . * . | dd 14,267 final en- fy and jealousy can breed in the human breast a spire, {He Part of the untortunates who put thelr money : i mut ee r Damrosch, the noted ries of all kinds were approved for{ Hunters say smokeless powder is as mighty and as unstable ay dynamite that whole | M0 tem. And even they are doubtless trying t) sa wil ‘I think you have the nasties! mhakkinge about wetting (eee ee tederal ee eee te ‘ ghty ¢ stable as ¢ e tha pe ‘ big oad incon ae ge eve _ + ing a Z m a eceipts of the federal government oa ° errr . Slasees and whole nations can ‘be charged. with this forget ‘ wanted to make you jealous w of any Woman, young or old, -modern music and, as teyon bonuses, royalties, and rentals} The height of ignorance is for a ad | If Mr. Nye classifies these enterprises as co; course you know is whom Thave come in contact in serves me, it nt like (under the law providing for leases of girl to get married simply because explosive until some chance spark touches it. of | ye : 5 She never liked “i all my. life." human is like the oral rights on the public domain ;she is tired of working ni it blows an empire to ruins or rocks eiviliza-/OPer#tive, his error is not unnatural, When these ts.eond day af TOMORROW—Letter from Sully pack of a donkey: if you beat it iymregated $278,708. : one , i t pire to + ocks v A + i} . > . * pe aie Sd ? . erepates = 15,0085, . MCE ity spetlesial. mevowttinis, 1 . ene [Concerns were booming he had not been long enough «dent h ii 4 Hhall sot | Atherton to Leslie Prescott. ough it will become insensible to |*®* pee eA | Only thing worse than being both- lind ts Most, bear testimony te this. truth, Amd |i! He State 0 be very familiar with wheat wass 0° |= aes : = saw dimmy Woods, who 1 HIGH SCHOOL pS aE EEE Nora: wii RUDRA ERAN | ing on, and he might easily have been misled byt wn. “And thank you very|heard singing here and th “« 99 | <1 Aecka Nike achand winter f6Gathe there wis a thnig that began a the conversation whieh he heard. And a lot of th 4 the vide : the town, and he making a great HONOR ROLI ice man. And it is this that we are atrs ; ‘ 1 j f ij ‘ ae (To Be Continued.) stir in Tex Rickard’s new garden pastes sues i ag folddimers ae Ny thought that these concerns were | singing, “Old Pal of Mine.” aon he “a . Shooti ie a livi ie a How can we remove this fear by ignoring ;" th singing, “Old Report cards bearing the grades for] Shooting dice for a living is a (eno ly pretandine that.appe nd. injuath | cooperative. ‘Phe farmers were permitted to ¢o | fo) e . — = Abe anal whose punie once }the second six-weeks period have been’ shaky business, ot by pretend at oppress: and injustice |°" . . 7 2 ae 7 was to be found on ort page distributed in the high school, und ate! no longer exist; not by striving to clamp the jid [Oberle to the extent of putting up the money, bul Ly OLIVE ROBERTS BAR TY | rverybody knows, und he was ut al students having « gevoral average ot | Dogs can't climb trees ia the res- down tighter. AN the bayonets on earth cannot | Mt i Ingle nistance did the farmers exercise) a 5s Awe. bebe. all night club engaging in a fake fight ]90 per cent or above are listed on the !son there are cats left. : . jcontrel, Always in the immediate background wale pteture ta the picture wy the |e. for the edification of the spectators | following “honor roll ee check a people's determination to wipe out a tie. | So y oe 4 : eal ets int bo galle : wma Fund pretending to be knocked out Freshmen. . | Do your income tax worrying early ». It is by declaring that equality and freedom |%0Me (rlend of Mr. Townley's wits the controlling [omy a auiet dignifi Ye pay tithe of sine and | While on the sidelines watehed Micky | Amundson, Thelma, Boutrous, Tom,|and avoid the rush. and tolerance shall be the order of the day instea || Merest done up in a neat package. lhaikehureer on i nd have omitted. the| Walker and Teddy Hayes, whose|Robbins, Helen, Vettel, Theo. L: - = n ie d fi order of the day inste: ide gal diene room for hope. Mr, ‘Townley | htier matters of the law, judg-|™mes are replacing Attell’s in the|Vzral, Vernon, Wenzel, Ralph. If ignorance were bliss it would be of inequality and slavery and hatred; by removin ‘i net ae ment, merey and faith; these ought | fickle sport world. A Sophomores folly just the same. iin), instend of explaining it away of abutting | 2 just now cooperating in oil after about the same li ye to have done, and not to leave| .58¥ four young women, on the! Bigler, Ivan, Crawford, Jean, Dailey, af 5 our eyes to it: by thinking @ little bit more at one /2M fashion, ‘The other fellows put up Ue money the other undene-—Matt, 23:23, 24, | Street ee ee aie uptene of Melba, Eineas, Grace, Faber Anthony, ache Mitehell. trial is nothing nee 4 ig ee ee ba lore of Our , ait em We E su 3 ritz, Pauline, Glaser, Raphael, Gor-j Aviation always has its ups an and @ Hitthe less of ourse lly. Working {274 ‘He ‘does the ‘rest, whatever that (8. And there i cuss es bitter cold night and they seemed to|don, Ruth, Hilken, Meta, Hall, Olive, | downs. iP ei e aa wollen billie abouk ds " “Vis quite a revival of interest. leat ota ate nine It will not do to be mind it mot at all, but seemed most |Neugelbauer, Florence, Quain, Buell,| peace as weil as ti g¢ about i andlord, 4 iss le ing and sinners e _ a ya zoniun, whereas their i ii i ree’) In these ways, some day, we may lose our last . Ibeautiful young lady about to step] Henty Ward Beecher. Dee coaagions peteierebned erie Betmetads Elan, Seeeee ene r Tonight’s Radi four j Making Hash of State Governments |into: the coun a silt chal sceeueat ae - = muffler and reefer. And it set me to|Shern, Ralph, Strutz, Marion, Ward,| onignt’s lo | H genes a bu . Bill, the) Tribune Want Ads Bring Results | wondering of these great changes | Dorothea. le (Chicago ‘Tritaney BE Senate = Birdsclls, Ste ah uaGk -praites|aicun eekeaniod” on tute aeeaot Ss uman Factor in Jury Duty | Gov. MaePa Ferguson is making Texas state ad-| Twins wondered if it riaaiameaaaaeana Bivia UHawlag esusanaHsttin ‘sya. program, ee Tne sia’ aint) eoneaniad With qetanlivedk liiietpation: 3 Hike cance HEL ons ¢ heat from this wonderful muffler the ag yer eupan, in, Syd> Eastern Ti ne ls yneornes metaphyscis! | ministration and polities snappy. The speaker of | }80r Tui tals MY ney, Jensen, Gwendolyn, Nuessle, metern me: doctrines,” said Judge Johnson in instructing te | the house will call the house of representatives to- | ””“Would you {i is Francis, O'Hare, Edmund, Person, | WSAE (a6a; a epee program. jury in the Blazer case that “a being porn of w gether to consider impeachment of Goy. Miriam: | With me, chi ) 7 ‘ Seniors. | WGY (379.5) 9:30—Dance t ; is regarded as human in the eyes of the law.” Jim. Jim himself and alone has been through it |£2%4 sweetly. neNer on NOW, J’M_NOT GOING To] Yes, MY See. Erickson, Esther, Miller, Simon, Central Time ‘S Of course that is right once before. ARGUE \T witH Nou pton, The law has its own He was quoted recently, and he says | part way to Bill at you whtleties, by which we are «il bound, but it is not misquoted, as saying that when the people elect i | on, the we: { 1AM RIGHT, concerned with the subtleties of other crafts. A Miriam they really reelected him as a vindication | quickly. a KNOW IT Just AS man proved guilty of bootlegging is not guilty of #nd that he accepted it and was governor. eT eee canal i if the officers procuring the evidence omitted, Mrs. Ferguson's use of the executive pardoning | Cranford. “Hetty, my maid, has. all | some technical requirement in procuring the search; power is the basis of one charge against her!, Fer-| Sorts of extra wr: d warrant, But a man is “sane” or “insane,” not in|8uson’s manipwiation of her and her office is an-|"t be oe accord with he fine distinctions of medical knowl edge, but other, by the crude common sense of the definition. This is what juries are for—to relieve the tech nicalities of the law by their own ruder sense of practical justice, and to put into the crudities of the law on other subjects so much of the refine-| ments of modern conception ag they themselve happen to share. in his wife's essential to their own 3 may | Seriously le tion and ‘hash out of other probabi one of the reasons why our “criming ; Ws onght to be repealed, or to be interpreted by juries or mitigated hy the pardon-, hisuer id ing power of governors in accordance with actual | ere is in t j The things against which syndicalism laws | SOT of retri are directed are wrong. other and Mis wrong to undermine government by crime, | OMY check or to condyet a campaign against industry by the | PUblic offici destruction of other people’s property. But, in the | poses are no § case of other wrongs, the law very properly limits! Twenty and twenty-five years ago it was the itself to the actual perpetrator, or to the direct in-|4™eTican city which cansed concern to people | citer no more than one degree removed, | anted good government. ( Logical deductions of responsibility carried well. through several ages of inference are regarded’ as | of what municipal administration ought to be, but; muffler and passed it Beene | too remote for the law. But, in these syndicalism |! have improved. Contrast the administration |, TRE couch rolled “along through laws, a person belonging to an organization affiliated | Of Chicago and the administration of [linois, leah Mage hey pasaed neNier with another organization which has indorseq a| The states have gone down hill, There is evi-| Pretty villages, and busy towns, and third organization which has enunciated doctrines | (ently more a sth ched Mudport, Which, if some one carried them out, would be criminal, is convicted of responsibility for these in- ferentially indorsed doctrines and these hypothetical acts, The doctrines may be pernicious and the acts yiminal, but the Jaw should confine itself, in this case ag in others, to those. who commit or directly inelte these acta, ‘ jocose about the administration The Texas voters when they created this situa- Vion of an impeached governor returning to office | town clock. iding | Started if we wa clothes knew they were not dec of the state upon any i it. ‘The responsibilities intelligently or They were making a cireus out of an the election m! the state ility. ht be expected to mak There wasn't affairs, he Fergnson following, but there bution when factions try to get e ucceed. That seems to be about th many American states have on thei tls, that other factionalists whose pur- better shall swarm cn them. They cannot be accepted as model; wlertness in the city electorate. Th cily voters get etter ‘results even if they are im-/“but it i perfect, ‘The yoters of (Me states put up with al | most. anything that happens, indifferent to it o1 it, There is a lot of locoed democracy in the United $s, States running wild and getting bogged, with loony , here reasons for doing damaging or eccentric things, knew they were not taking even | any | Bill cracked h We do not suppos2 there is any 1 Of public service in the opposition than; Now the cities do|fortable in ‘one of ithe bi things We must be s Bill, the coach before the chi Lond b right in, eve ; Cranford. “AI but Hetty [sit inside to watch the bagk. So they climbed up the ladder-lilke steps at the back of the coa whip and away went, bumpity bump over the ‘bles of London Town. People got on and people got off, and it was all very merry. |” Once an old lady got on, with | white goose in a basket. But th came off and the goose flew Fal| ind Bill had to stop the coach and let the old lady out. | Nobody seemed to notice Mister | Bule Cap. Being a iry he on aged to keep out of sight some way | But he was there just the Nancy was quite cob. i Bill, the co: entirely too | shawls, and 8 \ he was ja t e) “im sor: Miss Cranford, 1 think » children, wetting late, and you'd better get off he and go back on that coach standing there, It the London Coach and 1 know the driver, He will take care you. Keep the wraps- Mister kins will send them to me. And} e two shillings for your fares, tood-bye!"” “Godd-bye” said the Twins climb- | * i‘ JUST AS WELL AND You | You DO! — AND , 1 MIGHT SAY Olson, Wilma, Webster, Grace. —— Shade fractured hund in New York ‘ity. Deadwood, S. D.—Two children of Mr, and Mrs. Matt Perche of near Newel] lost their lives when fire destroyed their home. The parents and five other children escaped. Minneapolis, Minn.—Fred Fulton, boxer, has applied for re-instate- ment as patrolman on the Minnea- polis force. Minneapolis, Minn.— Plans for formation of a large intercollegiate hockey league comprising all middle western states and including junior colleges, normal schools, ‘state col- leges and universities, were an- nounced ‘by Emil Iverson, coach at Minnesota. ,Flandreau, S. D.—Harry Gibbons, Sioux City, Ia., knocked out Bud Kowalski, Fargo, in first round. Minneapolis, Minn.—-Car of fancy ‘Montana wheat which graded No. 1 dark northern, sold for $2 bushel, highest cash transaction here for one year, / ——_—_ | MANDAN NEWS | See Nels O. Dah! of Huff, N. D., has gone to Norway where he spend the Christmas and New Year's holi- days with his parents. This is Mr. Dahl's first trip home since coming to the United States 12 ygars ago, John Gardner, farmer living south of Mandan, egeaped without injury on Wednesday when his car turned com- pletely upside’ down when coming down's hill neat the experiment sta- \ | WDAF (365.6) 8—Musical program. | i WLW (422.3) 0—Musical con- foc eer ees ee cert. * \| NEWS BRIEFS { KSD (545.1) 9—Orchestral pro- | |!eram. : > > tSTHS (374.8) 9—Concert orchestra. St, Paul, Minn—The bout here De: gram, ALE apener RP ; cember etween ave ade an 5 :30—O: Jack Malone was canceled when! proAN (526) 10:80—Orchestral KYW (536) 11—Variety program. WFAA (476) 11—Orehestral pro- gram. : Mountain Time KOA (322.4) 9—Orchestral selec- tions. Pacific Time KGO (361.2) 8:10—“The Merry Widow,” comic opera. KFI (467) 10—Midnite Frolic. _KNX (337) 11—Hollywood Nite. ,A man should not hold a girl ‘on. his lap unless he can support her.