The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 26, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 18 Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, D., N. und entered at the postoffice al wnd class mall matter, President ad Publisher tes Payable In Advance r year eestaes ear (in Bismarck) per year outside Bismarck) , outside of North Dakota... ... Member Audit Bureau of Cirealatlon Member of The Associated Press a y entitled to the $7.20 + 1.20 - 6.00 - 6.00 Daily by vand alsc {shed here 1 ication of all uther matter ereip are ulko Forelgn Representatives GQ. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHIC H DETROIT Tower Kresge Bldg. AND SMITH PAYNE, BURNS % Fifth Ave, Bldg. NEW YORK Compulsory Training Necessary The facu iy rin im n alt on knock = Bu to States Spend Money Cor n “ n a F) Congre t 7 to taxpa " ington One of the ¢ the oft e net inde sinking per It nent tial f fund assets, 2. In What Hard Road United Miles Stand Fo | i THE: BISMARCK TRIBUNE sent the ¢ In re thear f smugglers to prison eral agents did not prosecute the j What’s the Use? SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1925 COLDS MAY PRECEDE Bat that young man therenpon left. her and CHRONIC CATARRAH inarried another girl ne the proces& isn’t al vay as me ‘ eet by DR. J. HW. CUMMING Be deep in the bone beneath the often it is wholly unexeiting, colorless, matter of e A Surgeon General, U. S. Public if any one offers to treat your fact. ‘There aren't any newspaper headlines abut UMM TAKE ‘A LeTTer, ae Health : case by. mail, just remember’ the 1. Usually the man himself hardly realizes what DEAR MISIE(2- ER-A -Ves You clnatd find little difficulty | Complicated nature of a catarrhal * eye's - 4 % condition, the careful examination os is doing for him, But the bell BesTicR - SHE'S SOME SWELL LOOKER int nthe symptoms Of) ind study required of any physician real, neverth A LETTER TO MISTER — jie wie nasal eatarrhs To deter] jefore your ¢Ase can be sliagnosed une ae a girl went from her fath SSN ho - AST 00G- UNm= eee davalead an. SoH Gi] Properly and the folly of wasting me F : AND CLASS ~ Bor OG x invelved in oft our money ion treatments by mail f asmall city to study She was young, f vires the se of an}? EAR MISTER — eee fIND, LETS CALL » full of life and half dazzled by her youthful Her musie teacher had hinted th her voice “ heard could in New ITA ON York n oabroad. All the poetry | _ ree sili rie yuth were burning: within vl , Phe fature fo be wonderful, dazzling | t. - new she could do it | "UL BE GLAP ‘ aoe g ) WHEN SAE \ Athen she met aman an earnest, struggling \ Gers ou \ nu sehen And, unfortun, girl, in } HERE cowith hin. She indrried him, and they removed = a small town in the back country, where the young husband had taken charge of a little vol, We t cnded the dreams. The little se dn't go ve well. Money was werse than scarce, ation nd little luxuries the girl had to on the charity 1 siste » had married toon and the ontinued | The { more tired, tof light her. And the acher husband died woman ous herse’ 1oturned t 1 ider to the ve will go don perhaps most of the time s the Ta about an hour Inch 0! Pi i the Twins had found nearly a ae pon her dred And they p aoe i ina elves t hew . | halt past tour ever if had : : | changed to the o aces: _ LETTER FROM §s CARTON I was indeed very vlad to see chang 1 to their pr divetoth TO JOUN ALDI SCOTT | Paula, although, Jack, I'm not sure) saiv y should, ar Sorry, old boy, IT had to come. it the sensible thi when they the doors of memory in your city ngth off ti how home and leave you but I knew that you did not need me and some busi- | hess has come up in connection with |? an expedition Tam joining that | jnecded my atte immediately. | I know Tam breaking the news to|#™y Way swayed by the old sey ather abruptly but not even ment-—the eld thrill. Gld friend, could I confide | Knew you have only seen her once -jexcept that time you took | | throu » mill, but I also know | jen |that you cannot keep minds apart} of some sin of the tradi- |though continents separate bodies, | umy life. If, however, she eventually finds | |, how omeone she think of Editorial Comment both| | enough not to be in An Example for the Senate the 1 ver, Twas over at can : nd saw you, Jack, f - of her children, [ hope she t ime without either of ‘or then she will at 5 it was a well vi tively happy. | “Goodbyes of any kind are sue has more of the | ghastly thing: nthe wife. } I think at last, Jack, you ic is ta be back | are realiz sibilities of It sec your position. You will not 1 Three m | |tined to be fr «ee wheel in the fut too, has cle Tha ugthy on Ma ttee held a action sjare s er | i i} f | a smal that ewed over, ‘renchmen will try. orth Pole. How fo ot just vo down and sit in, » house. . please, children, ——— have happened if het Eastern Time ht cold in that draughty| WEAF 6 Dinner music. 7 kk, bef i ry-| Dan 7:45--Boys’ Band! {out whats \ ; MS g "| eMAQ (ait DAS will be ly apparent. Nor should you attempt to treat yourself, The are many people why are chronic invalids today sim- ply because they at some earlier time have indulged in the practice of treating themselves for disease, Years of painstaking study and preparation are required before a physician can make an accurate diagnosis and preseribe a scientific treatment. Leaving It to a Doctor It would be far better for all con cerned if the layman would leave the practice of medicine to those who have tried by years of endeavor to fit themselves for the practice of medicine. It is always the course of wisdom to consult a specialist when serious disorder in the nose and throat is sustained but be sure the man you consult is a specialist in these dis- and not a quack. T lie wi untrained and dees not of the in- It is sufficient for the individual to recognize the fact that there are certain marked symptoms that in- dicate chronic nasal affection, and jcall for the attention of a trained physician. @lt is the province of the physician to find cut the exact ‘location and the extent of the trou- ible and) prescribe the necessary | ment. If you find that you have a cold jin the head which persists for some little time or recurs frequent- pparent provocation, or ight provocation, you fur granted t ther our ages or in their vicinity. it omething wrong with | is {ta al If ind that you are unable to p: ‘breathe freely through one 'your nose, you should take ean if the s any underlying | usually easily determined if you obstruction inside the nose or be-| can find out where the specialist ‘hind it where it should open into | received his medical education and ithe upper part ef the throat, |how much time he spent in the i If you have such a condition and | process. i accompanied with mucous! Perhaps in only one other branch etions from the nose, you should! of medicine has there been more i uspect that the ob-| abuse of the liberality of laws than istruction may be caused by inflam-'in this field which pertains t> the tion and swelling resulting from nose and throat. catarrhal condition, Obtain the services of the best ; A profuse discharge from the] snecialist available instead of [nose which pet apt to! adopting the haphazard method of | ; bea chronic arrhal inflammation anowing any one to experiment which has extended to one or more! with your case, or the more com- ef the cellular spaces connecting| mon imcthod of allowing an infec jwith the nose and called accessory | tion t> develop without attention i sinuses, into a serio’ chronic condition, Foul breath and impaired sense’ and you will find that catarrh in \of smell should cause you to consult | particular will hold less of fear for ide of 0} eases la physician though a foul breath | you. @ and may be due to some condition af-}” Remember, in conclusion, that hun-|fecting the mouth or teeth. Re-| itched {member that a headache is by no By | means an uncommon ‘mptom of h requires careful diagno: d been sericus disorder of the nasal pass-| and the aid of a reliable ph’ in the fag a y sinuses. Es-|and perferably one who has sp h cats is this the case when the! cializ ses of the nose and re above the eyebrows | thr atarrh if properly treated can be cured, and that proper treatment of Tonight’s Radio | awing up Weel eT did see 1484) | 10-—"Pop Con Vincent a ship heading for dear ol’ England. \ Le and his orchestra. Joubtless you know, long ere this De one ad: {Doubtless you know, long ere : that the jawbreaking moniker is that of the green-hatted Michael Arlen, who de more shekels than the ) 6:30 Orchestra, 8° organ!” ‘There were four Kouyoumdjia 6:30 Grehestra. b ns of a shrewd Balkan trade jand Russell Pratt. And oue did take over the father’s to fly dologue, | busine: nd one did become a deal- jolisht heat in rare books in Paris, and one did KYW become broker in South America done did become Michael Arlen, f ulate afternoon coats es, selling ta r that hi 1 of » blotted out, Everybody would favor the world musica! progra e got his pen name theory that The other day when Mrs. Ather-|court if they would let Unele Sam Jl Arthur Hs nd his organ yab- | py ly opening the pages of a |. much Gs have another che swith you looking over the! he the judge. ior telephone hook and jabbing his fin- y mistake we m ’s mail, | went into the nur - av (870.2) ger ata name. Be this as it may, he ‘ ts i @ Paula with th NRE. “Be sae | &—Hour of music useth still a third name when travel- the int t ly times s¢ and foun pula with ihe chil Man in shville, bated v S| WLW ing. ‘This is Martin Herman, which based on asked t> forgive means not only |@ren. Little Jawk did nothing dur- | sentenced to years, so he won! he did: bodily lift from the brother ‘i " forgiving our enemies and those|ine my whole visit except to talk have to worry about the coal bills. of Al Woods, his manager, Which, , and on them al that b hurt us, but our: of his “ownest, muver.” It — n turn, revi that Al Woods is ring Includes al! 4 ous own mistakes as w have just. broken Paula’s hear Taxe so high. ‘They cost al- 10:05 ~ y 4 1 evidence the Senate commit le these m t, L could see that she most as much as bootleg booze. AA (476) 8 urely, it hecometh a most vexing a ‘evidence terse : uld ays remember | proud of his alegiance and loyalty jbl xram, —11--Orche to keep up with names in this consideration of the bill from t and not grow discouraged a: d|to Leslie, Sometimes wisdom comes with! , WOC (4x4) 9 : r lage, what with pen names and ‘ Rea ie nas 3 3 juvenile artists. 11-—-Orehestr stage and sailing names, flice the House, A separ » but begin again, the world) "TOMORROW: This letter contin-| re ome alone. Wo- ata iw. Prince Anga, of Denmark, would. be time + much better, hued. led for for-)""kerHs (274.8) 9--Male quartet.| watching the negro ‘dancers at the = a Bitte peodletens we Ss cee . 9:35-—Dance Frolic. at Plantation Club, and why so hand- . ; WDAF (365.6) 11:45—Nighthawk | some a royal youth should cause le: Two Letters i lot of extra work to be hack at his wood-) Frolic. commotion than the Prince of Wale: (Minneapolis Journal p toy-shop.” _, sawing again, Maybe he has learn- Mountain Time leaveth me baffled. Surely here is Minneapolis Journa:) fe urning ta the Twins he said, od it is best to say nothing and| KOA (322.4) 9-—Orchestra. one to flutter the pulses of the young Here are two letters, both written in Oregon, t the d hunt up Inch cay wood Pacific Time ladies and a mean foxtrot he shakes, ! ir oT fo newspapers Of ay . KGW (481.5) 6—Dinner concert.) | am told. tell thelr own atory. “To one of the newspapers 0° ne 9—Dance tunes And it do seem that there be quite th Rainier Review, Walter M. Pierce, OLIVE ROBERTS BARTCY 1 them to come to| . People in. Scotland: are not soj 27 Vance fans 3 EG ae ue fhe “coned eae aa bobbed ‘ 1 m, says: aia, r to help|dumb. In Glasglow, a doctor was ones in this town of late for in 3 a TROUBLE s Vil yay! fined for prescribing expensive single evening did I see also Prince at repeated and high-col- When ¢ med Paul of Greece, with monocle in eye; Y on of the details of crime ne the Due de Nemors, de Orleans, de ‘A THOUGHT more —— Chartres doing the night clubs and has a had bad effect upon the impression ove. the Prince and Princess Murat. able minds of young people, eee ee EVEREIT TRUE Withdraw yourselves from every} Saw Mistress Dorothy Gish in mid- r 3 4 ced Mrs. Lae is | brother that walketh <isorderly, and| morning, und yhe wearing one of stecl corporation in novels and plays. + his word, one cure for newspapers let on that » Governor Pierce was Governor at But w ming publication ne news for : Myers, District Attorney of Multnomah County, wi iting this letter to a Justice of the 11 Peace at Independence, Orgeon: o crime. European roa ers, by their cont a to whcih we Tu ubmitted. after the We had a man by the name of J. P. Mi obile ca American mach all randa arrested in this County for the pos- gh and awkward, to straddle the ruts, ion of a still, Beto » could try him, bumps of American roads, while g low, for the » Governor sent him wh a pardon, and smooth 1 Miranda had to plead guilty to get the par- ut the motor car, to ever . wp the hard roads of in dust. don, ro the reader is left the task of judging whether After three thousa s of road build 4 ing, they had to start even with us. Now we have press or the Governor is more to blame for | Hy d w ever excess of crime is making itself felt in outbuilt the world, The good roads movement 5 for the rich man’s automobile privilege of the few, put oy plea of moving the crops pass all the talking point! original promoters. Oregon. y desire, still the * farmers on the It has turned out to sur cere or bluffs, of its “Yiddish” is from the German word |which means Jewish. Yiddish is the It has made the motor vehicle the convenience spoken by a large proportion of the Jews. the poor rather than the juxury of the rich. It has | High German dialect whica developed under He moved more than the crops It has abolished the | brew and javie influence, Roughly speaking, Yid- isolation insanity of farmers’ wives, and the “hick” |dish contains about 70 per cent of German words, verdancy of their sons. It has lessened the pro- \20 per ‘cent of Hebrew and 10 per cent of Slavic. vincialism of city dwellers Hebrew characters are used in writing Yiddish, thus It has made good schools access‘ble to everybody. | giving the written language more the appearance of It has given rural delivery of mail and newspape Hebrew than German It is now widely used as It has made fresh meat no longer a monopoly of ,the language for intercommunication by the Je cities, It has, in fact, transformed life, thought, | of different nations, culture and civilization, It has been the most start-| Yiddish had its origin in the migrations of Jews ling thing of the century. from Germany into Russia and Poland in the fit- teenth centary. These Jews spoke and wrote Ger- man with facility. But in the Slavic country they “You know, a girl will go down to hell for a man | Were compelled to learn a new language. Several if she loves him.” \centuries later the descendants of many of these This is the final remark in an interview given | Jews, returned to Germany. In each country the by a New Orleans girl who, discovering that her| Jews absorbed part of the local language which waa sweetheart was enmeshed in a narcotic smuggling mingled freely with the original Hebrew. Yiddish ring, went to the underworld and got, evidence that. hes an extensive “literature. i AS i while i 5 What Is “Yiddish”? (Kansas City Times) on the “judisch,” language sensations 2 : \ Leyalty | crime, It is a) ( AND OG KNOW How FAR THAT STATION 1S Feod HERE! AND WHEN T TUNED IN, SHS Mister Claus i he is able tos t cpt SOUNDED AS CLEA Fire in his room, and ” as 4 BECL Wt! he'll be » ia | sleigh himself on Chris is eve. T SAY, 6VERSTT, | don’t know what would happen i he TALKS ABOUT | missed king his toy bi around ‘and sliding down the chimneys. to DISTANCE! — (Till the: stockings, But go on up. | He's waiting for you.” “Oh, hot” nta Claus, when! t pretty s t tell you ho T do hope there won't be trouble, b: you'd better One “never ppen.”” | the words out of his} Tam. more ree mouth in rushed the Toy | Maker. “T resign.” he cried wildly, “1) <_— gn vight here and now, Mister i, Here I've been tan FINDLAY r toy fac’ fo r ‘ pee it, FOSTORIA Claus. “You act like i : it MI. so | “I'l tell you what’s up, Mister | Claus," said the Toy Maker. “It’s! those ‘stupid elves in the work-shop. ;They won't do what they ure told and they have the squeaks all mixed | up, ey have the baby-dolls in long clothes all sayi the oil-cloth cats “all crying ‘n ‘You are Now I told them not to get them mixed, but they did, and they sewed up the squeaks all wrong and I don't know {what to do ubout it!” | “Dear! Dear!” said Santa ©! “That is a nice thing to do, I'll Q E it happened, Mi ENTERING THE CITY OF FOSTORIA weccone, | nd with extra help per- and dolls can he ripped Mother! Mother!” he called, “Will, you please —confe here? 4 Mrs, Clause came bustling in, “Here j Tam, Santa, what is it7” “You'll have to help me’ got | dressed, Mother,” said Santa Claus, |‘‘V'm just about well anyway, and not after the tradition which he re- ceived of us.—2 Thess. 3:6. No company is far preferable to ‘bad, because we are mor: catch the vices of others than virtues, as disease is far more contagious than health.—Colton. Dates Set for Rate Hearings Hearing on the state mill and ele | reduction of all intra ‘grain and grain produ and Forks and for various tra privileges which it does x0 ° joy will be heard by the a roud board on February 1, according to an announcement at the board of- | fices. ij The cases of the North Dakota | ary: Bureau Federation vs. the cago Milwaukee and-St. Paul Railway d others and of C. R. Stone vs. the nenpolis, St. Paul Ste, Marie rail- way will be heard on February 2. Both gases involve the alleged d crimination between rates on gravel, crushed rock and similar commodi- ties as between North Dakota points and in Minnesot: ‘ A public hearing on grade crossing protection over the tracks of the Great Northern railroad and Soo line east of Bismarck in Burleigh county will be held on February 4, NOTICE TO AUTO OWNERS It is against the city ordi- ‘mance to leave an automobil parked in one place for longer ‘than 12 hours anywhere in ‘the business district and the police will enforce, the law. | Automobiles left standing on the business streets for more than 12 hours at a time will be pulled off the ‘streets by | the authorities. By order of the Police Department. those scarlet turtle-necked sweaters and dragging her prize spaniel...... Saw Traffic Cop James Kelly, who is so expert at waving his arms on the street corner that he ranketh among the great handball players of the land, His partner in the New {York Athletic Club doubles is none other than Robert Warwick, the ac- tor. who off stage engageta much in athletic :....Saw Leonard Mer- rick, ish author who doth write \the most charming tales, and strange And fine but to really look at America. with him his daughter and a footloose pair they are. GILBE) NEA Service, Inc.) (Copyright, 1925, ‘Tribune Want Ads Bring Results , Some girls sing whose nerve is mueh stronger than their voices. to kay he hath not come to lecture , dno See

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