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

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune’: " paca As Independent Newspaper , WwW its nature de n WSPAPER j 8 Ibune Company, rKe ms stoffice at Publisher Sabsertpthoy Kates Payable tu Advance dient nie et eh Ae A Dally by er, per peat : ( Pa , t 3 rek) 5.00 1 a Member dod yi Cireulatlon ee ;: Member of The Associated Press = 7 i t FOmes BS GAYNE. F AND SMIT fo Ave Bldg ss —_ ~ Our Forests Poo | I. Hurd for t About Color } 1 ; Editorial Comment | ote ' musi Good News From North Dakota organize 5 G it I ‘ : ni r n two doilar p ' y i 8 A heavy awe fi in M A melodramatic 1 , our 125 repr n tual capacit Mar 1 ' to tune wit nijlion 1 prote t held by a tabloid: th ke » bone , ‘ and . tacit assumption that seandal nd nit a) most interesting 1 my A noean When ‘ 1 bre were 56 ir blithely as we do ne 1 ' 1 1 rent, and we often 1 three ae Hoprize fig nd gu rpallin vives and brainless 1 rythin 1 that i ' Loo slit y nd po D ' rt yut to f tears Iwersit tinue 1 ' abhletic and social Our me a ! 1 ‘ relig fakes continue to ‘ war good Minne to wecniiatate d r with the hookselle ' or some years in » farmers eto That the People May Know ye By direction Governor Theodo Chr SA th C to the wall IL get a v0 the St. Lawrence Commission of Minnesota ha n the ten to come. called and is sponsoring a Great Lakes:-St : Mdewater ( Pie ised OF SNOTHIncabetn Siate ‘Towns Change Their Names y convene in St. Paul, Minn. January stie and Gt ae (Nation's ta ) The question of whether the northwest is. to Uaving passed ‘through hompemin period of head or must.shrink back to 1900 depends upon “evelopment, American cities and towns appear to Whether the interior of the continent is to be placed | Yt Baviohe Een On, 0. the: anes By Upon a marine base or remain as no& landlocked "EY re known to the rest of the world, Old na The theme of the meeting: “We must either find #76 being discarded and new names are be # cheap way of getting to market or shrink the #¢opted northwest to 1900, vital fact facing the n In study of the origin of names of American The neavy in cost of rail trangpor: ; (UES in tuirty-one of the forty-eight states the lvl tation has moved this area more than a 1,000 miles "¥elopment department of the Chamber of Com ther from its markets in transportation cost than Merce Of the United States finds that in the five it was prior to 1914. Industries are moving and YC!" period from 1921 to sixty-qines changes must move from the interior to the seaboard—and | Ye"? recorded, compared with only thirteen in the agricultural production to areas more fayored py | Preceding five year period proximity thereto. “It is apparent,” the department finds, “th This situation has been greatly accentuated by the {Test In local names hay increased materially in very cheap carriage offered through the Panama|¢ last peri¢d, particularly in the years 1924 and : i so that today the North Pacific ports are "0 first half of 1925, there having been Lwenty-fou: to North Atlantic ports, via the Panama | CMMKeS in 1924 and twenty-one in the first hal! 1, than is Pittsburgh or Cleveland to the same Among the states most active in this r ports. Pe : Lumber moves from Seattle to Atlantic ports, via NCW York, twenty-one changes; California,. cigh . Panama, at a saving cr ten to twelve dollars per |'©¢s Oklahoma, thirteen; Mlorida, eleven.” * thousand over the transcontinental rate. Canned! Duplication of names of cities is a serious prob 3 S00d8 move from Pacific ports to Atlantic ports on |!€m- There are thirty-one Franklins, twenty-seven = a rate of 40 cents j Madisons, twenty-five Clevelands, twenty-four Lin hundred, whilst the rate is 67% | cents per hundred from Eau Claire, Wis.—the cen- ter Of the canning industry—to the me points. Flour from Seattle to New York tikes a rate of cents a hundred. The e from Minneapolis: to New York*for domestic consumption is 4314 cents, The middle and northwest dreas of this country are iu very truth—marooned! ‘Phe only remedy ts | to place ‘these areas on a marine base by extend- ing deep water carriage along the northern borders ‘of the United States as it now exists on the West, the South, ahd the East. To deny this right of access to the sea to fdrty millign people is to coln: twenty-four Mcnroes, tw nty-th Wilsons, thirteen Roosevelts, fifteen Adams, twelve Tafts and five Hardings. | Capitals of | duplication, towns so sa90 | | ations also been a source of here are, the report states, eighteen named - Paris, eighteen Genevas, seventeen , twelvesMoscows, eleven Viennas, aix Pekins and two, Bruseels, Most towns and cities are named after persons ‘or places, ‘but three are named after newspapers Argusville, N. J.; Banner, Ind., and Tribune, Kgn., the last, after the New York . Tribune, Horacg, Gree, A ME eatin Eee corey ceeese fustice tila Bs° President Cootidge has aptly said of 1" Paper. iin RG IY acai ‘ \ * : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Touchdown! Touchdown! LETTER FROM MRS. MARY ALDEN PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRES- COTT—CON TINUED y P 4 a OLIVE ROBERTS RARTC: by y needed to be a they seam in a few minute on rited wood geous trapping “See here, Benko a fat wom huge green wround for th | lordly te rides we wich for nothing new friends here, Yu our Sath, Se che wast | (“Quite vot Quite vot” fat woman in th gk ve all the | Alvo our| 0 and | ‘| green oH, "You shall ride till th , | ythin, my dears, It with (donkey's backs, to be sure.” a Then she rang 4 dull, and the I merry-go-round vtarted aguifi on it vels, Tink pang! Naney and Nii soon decided that of ull the adventures they had had su vfinkle! Toot, toot! Bang, VENTURES : TOMORROW—1 y Alden Preseatt —Continued. A ANP THiS ter to Le fron th (To be Continued) Dd THOUGH? nen s find the ne ho crowd t n, walk the length o 1 walk two block rth—and durin@this trip rom the underground shops a hun f and groaning of rrowing the course nin hole I at work one Peop catacomb: turning more ons, the and. out in Arize more k for r eight ho: Mrs, | Batic lueo, newspapers of almost any r-\Jand, oyster stews or hot dogs, flow- “Lers, can nd groceries, | Ww nye little world this » murky all se m anand pay Only such ion makes possill ir on damp days. Y. hexlt * MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1925 BACTERIA FIND WAY INTO. BODY THROUGH TEETH BY DR. HUGH S, CUMMING Surgeon General, U.S. Pablie Health Serv ce of the body and its army of blood stream policemen, called white lls, or ieucocytes, may for a con- siderable time devour the poisonous toxins and hold its own. If the resistance of the body i lowered from overwork, long expe anwl rods to-| ure to cold or dampness, grippe, 0 ed and the bae-|other debilitating diseases, it may \ -|be impossible for the time being to [fight the battle successfully and the ne sur » tooth wh up and when o the den until, the { where itt even: | pulp. | very deli ithe When tooth rapidly pul bacteria live ind gradually work the Ve cent rou where live pulp has reach the small nd of t Dol Ww and on 3 on through into the surrounding tr orah tons for ld be fact eoud that it forms of bacteria {than fifteen million in th of i four hours you r slop in anufae- he poisonous s doby the :nillion: stay in the ¢ r blood str Fried to all parts of th really begins and enter the blood stre the whole bod find a more de- e than on the roots may lodge in the ining of the h dca of the teeth valves or in the or in the kidneys an se seriou trouble or perhaps death, Many times they make their home in the joints feet, and knees und ¢ mutism no. means are all the infections ferent parts of the body caus disensed teeth, but onsider | number of th a ym are and when w |sider that diseased teeth are so con ne | mon lo that th jority of the e neglect their teeth, statistic t 0) per cent of the dd teeth, it hoto run chances of such seriou trouble be of conditions that Jeould have n prevented so easily | An aching tooth is a very common iment bat will become le « begin to realize mon a H s thé danger signal the | ite pulp of the tooth sends out warn us that bacteria are pro. jaressing toward it and will soon de- |stroy it. It is much safer to be constantly n the lookout for dental de " rember clean tooth never dec jo our utmost to keep ths, the gateways to our bodi n and wholesome condition. [1 have no douit t had long sinee pal up his overcoat and mitts gn carrier rything: but ; A tory nti-Smok ling League tel P evils of fing. “Hundreds of men loosing of them with ¢ ed peddler, a small tan eye nut mer- street rying on hi crowd while h out for the police. chant chasing away the kids. And 15 men in a hole getti a new sub rted while 400 look on. What ridoscope MES W. DEAN. ——_ t 9, '| Tonight’s Radio | | o—_____ —__—_-— i astern Time Dinner co: Dinner musi pianist tenor, & Clark To WOO ( a woo Grand Opera (508.2), WC E WCAP’ (469), WTAG ta-| Ben Bernie and his orchestra, } WCAE (461.3) 6:30— Dinner con- cert. %—Nixon orchestr 9--Studio concert. Blue Rambler orchestra, 10 {—Grand opera. 11—Program from theater. KDKA (309) 6:30—Dinner concer 8—Ruud ight opera, & *s Happy Home Hour. Central Time WOC (484) 5:4 Chimes concert, WOAW (526) 6:20--Popular period. 6 Randall's Hotet tenelle orchestr: W 1 AA a4 WGN (370.2) 6:30 WCCO C64) 6:30 9 —Classiexl concert. Double oO pro: | y Olivia Williams and Hilda | = 9 Concert orchestra. | ‘ Dinner concert. 10 eee | en have to talk ty = y WOS G4 1 program. | ind cold for this stuff,”"} WDAP ds pro- 1 gotta job coming up right n by the ti i the second, _ Club. 11345 | st month, f | Curried the sign f afeteria antl untain Time tomy rab # with the p: A) 6:30--Dinner concert, | One. sign “Rialto Tailors. including the two. p you Ww The | act opera, ci.” 10-- Danee Y had tten | program e-fiies ed li Pacific ‘Ti central jend Mone, KGO (361.2) 6 Dinner concert. Lo DATA. Now, CLSTGN, MR, TRYG — You'RE CABORING UNDER A DELUSION! THE DATA RIGHT HERE To PRoys IT ! ATA IS AUTHENTIC, Toot In SECORING THIS che: ve Gor Musi KPI (467) 8 1 program, tos — * STATE BRIEFS | ee ia aioucietiny | MAY BUILD SWIMMING POOL Dickinson.—-Dickinson _ youngsters, jand grownups us well, will have good place to go swimming next mer, if plans now being considered muterialize, A committee of the As- sociation of Commerce has been nam- ed to investigate the conditions which enter into such a project. i; | GOES TO SOUTH DAKOTA | Dickinson.—N. E. Blood, formerly connected with the/Dickinson Motor Car company, has gone to Rapid | City, S. D.. where he has purchased an automobile accessories business, TURKEY DAY DRAWS CROWD LaMoure—Over 7,000 pounds of |dressed turkey were marketed in La Moure last Monday in connection with the community sales day. LARGER HIGH SCHOOL NEEDED Linton.—Many residents of Linton are agitating the building of an ad- dition to the high school here to bet- ter accommodate the large number of pupils. The addition of another story is suggested. , ® | CORPORATIONS | (ee ia Rie Henry L. Dahners, Arthur R. Tavis. and Helen A. House. Bank of Amidon, N. D., $15,000; George W. Conn, Jr. Times Record’ Co., Valley $30,000; Elmer D. Lum and Edith M. Lum, Staples, Minn.,. and Donald Lum, VaHey City. The Little ‘Missouri Credit Co, Marmarth, N. D., $26,- 000; Emil Scow and B. Thiegs of Bowman and W. J. Johison and MH. H. Bond, SAY BLONDES DYL ouT Boston—Many authorities believe that within two generations the United States will contain no blonde: with the exception of a few imn grants. It is. said that the blondes will disappear by intermarriage und daa dy accopting the pastimes-of tha| dark-haired races—dancing, gaiety, Livestock and night life, , The Music Shop, Mandan, $50,000; | Ropert Rotering, Carl Knudson and: { City,! TOM SIMS A friend tells us he got for his girl one night he sts and kissed a lipstick, | Honest}. t policy is to let Jall’s well ends weil enough ) alone Nothing tickles girl more than | having a date with a man who has a mustache {It’s a long rain that has no turning [inte snow, a n't it ng about powder lapel is it shows he rience enough to brush to act so darn you think, No old until he sing a girl on the forehe: els like a. Consistency would be a greater vir- tue if it were not so inconsistent, It is getting so hard for a man to find a wife who will help him wash the dishes. pu make it instead of Life is wh: iwhat you m Don't i follow have your nose when you ad. Retter walk instead. The most successful debater in this world is time. f NEWS BRIEFS __NEWS BRIEFS | Grand Forks, N. D.—Grand Forks people will vote on January 5 on the jProposition of issuing bonds amount- ing to $150,000 for the purpose of Iping build chool gymnasium. dates ure m in connection with the e tion of a,North Dakota Trepresentative who Will hold, the |Rhodes scholarship award this ‘year. The election will he held at the: uni- y today. Fargo, N. D.—A boxing program is to be staged Tu ‘ht to help the «0 ~Forum-Salvation Army Christmas fund, it was announced. It will be a n bout program with 28 rounds of boxing, Jack Hurley, promoter, is the donor. Fargo, N. D.—“We think our pros- iperity depends on the kind of care we take of our cattle while as a mat- ter of fact, prosperity is based on the care of our children. ‘We actually tuke better cure of our cattle than we do of our children,” declared Dr. C. C, Carstens, director Child Wel- fare League of America. Minot, N. D.—Colonel E. S. Person late last evening was elected com- mander of William G. Carroll Post of American Legion of this city. M. Kopald was elected vice commander ana aere Whalen was reelected ad- jutant. More than $500,000,000 worth. of candies of all sorts are annually con- sumed in the United State: The true pioneer is the husband jwha.veutures. into hia. ride’ first

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