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Bismarck Tribune Independent Newapaper QUB STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Bstabliched and left the stage, returning later to sing two encores. Finally she came out to thank the audience that gave her “not only such fine en- couragement but such genuine affection.” That little wave of sympathy was a noble all Usually it flows under the surface of our lives and is all too rarely seen. When it bursts forth, it reveals that we have a com mon bond, after all, and that the world is not so hard as it sometimes seems. Character Collateral A number of Massachusetts bankers have '90|agreed to lend money to commercial houses, per, ”, the lished herein. All y are ; AYNE COMPANY ¢ : tamale DETROIT Bids. ‘ie ° . ih Fifth Ave. Bidg. C@fificiel City, State and County Newspaper) Christmas Seals twentieth consecutive year Christ- are as a means of raising the needed funds the prosecution of the nation-wide cam- tuberculosis. That the money is thrown away ig convincingly vament under the Netional fubere movement under the Natio reu- a the death Bog Seige this oF hes t y per cent. help to su; hundrdeds of san- and toriums and have provided the of patients in their own is ant one billion and a sold this year, and them has enlisted the than 1400 local associa- out more than 5,000,- ve purchasers. The apiece, but they are battle against what was Greaded and deadly of diseases. po gamed favorite in New York, footligh' its in Carnegie aang for the first time city. th her ailver hair and Farrar had just com- and received splendid fickly to wave to a caught in her gown fy i get i s z elt ; it i! fy one person. A over the packed their seats and confidently Brief address entitled “The Silent Years.” Church College 7:80 to 8:15 p. m. " FIRST EVANGELICAL, CHURCH ees sen rene. Or oe Spreeitocens : Sunday morning Subject: “God's Greatness and Sunday school, 7:30 p, “What Among the B: Special music, wrrdooraL hy a. being offered for sale to the}. tendent m ELC. E. Prayer?” service 8 p. m. whe thought of the evening will be “Paul iy ‘ednesday evening, prayer serv- TIRE LATEREAY SEORCe enth St. and Ave. D. farmers and others in the flood-swept regions of Vermont, with only character as the collat- eral for the loang. The funds so advanced will be of vast aid in the east’s program of rehabilitation. It is good to know that disaster meetg such ready response from those who are able to help. _. And such funds will return. Here there may be a few who will take advantage of the offer, but they will prove the exception. The older J. P. Morgan used to say that character was the best collateral he wanted, and his books showed that he loaned millions on such security, with never a dollar lost. / Editorial Comment The Merger Is No _ Now Than It Was en (Duluth Herald) | Representative L. J. Dickinson of Iowa, lead- er of the farm bloc in the house, says that con- gress is likely to have a look at some of the oopeet railroad mergers, especially the jorthern merger. And Mr. Dickinson says that he is against this proposal, and sees nothing in it that is any better than it was when it was proposed in 1904 and the country, led by Roosevelt, de- feated it overwhelmingly. He reminds us that when the supreme court of the United States ruled Inst this pro- posal in the Northern Securities suit, Roose- velt said: “The Northern Securities suit is one of the great achievements of my adminis- tration. I look pon it with great pride, for through it we have emphasized in signal fash- ion, as in no other way could be emphasized, the fact that the most powerful men in this country could be held to accountability before the law.” Roosevelt is gone, and now the same pro- to merge parallel and competing is as flatly against the spirit of the present law ‘ + WHY DoNTCHA WEAR SENSIBLE UNDERWEAR AND WASHINGTON ween RODNEY DUTCHER men who have spent great wads of prevent as the Northern Securities proposal was| Boulder Da against the law of that day. It is not a proposal by railroad experts de- signed to improve railroad service. It is a proposal by New York banking inter- ests designed to improve the situation of rail- bi road stockholders. It would create, in an area constituting near- ly half the area of this country, a monstrous organization that would smother every aspect of railroad competition. < It is the moat abominable proposal of the kind that could be imagined, and the nation will not tolerate it. ing service, an hour of fellowship’ all people of the com- for night Wednesday, munity who have no other church me. pases itor. oe | ELTINGE THEATRE icture. llam BG pave mand GH ‘opio: com as | i two and put them “Time to Love” to the Eltinge for iy Tuesday. In it, Griffith has taken such an abstract thing as spiritualism and such a very real thing as four cap- tive balloons: and combined them in _ Ao" Maimqul t, Pastor, ve le jm . The Lh the evening o'clock and the following program will be gi Prayer. Vocal duet: riod Cunz and Mrs, ‘elo: Miss Lee. 3 Mra, Lindbloom. lo: Mr. Nordh udience, jwenson. Piano solo: : Male Vocal s cl service at 7:30 most laugh-p: farce that has flashed on the Eltinge screen in| some months. Griffith pieys with the spook ides gently. His sweetheart believes in pig a0, donee: never to see her again, reappears as a spirit, There are a score of is und. in this part of the picture, but! hen he and the girl, FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Corner Fourth Street (Ger. C. A. Stephens, 10:30 Morning worship, “Pro- and Persecution of and Avenue 3) diers on the Minister come roars, CAPITOL THEATRE fund intarseting 8 te, chores ous int as is, has rarely been Early Fe ® git geet: Af : i i uy ake nights wo. election, -but he was ination fient like a steer against: any at- tempt to send him te simply can't be attacked [At the Movies 1|°2" ——_________¢ Norris, you will recall, has been boosted for the western ordinary sense of comedy, carry it| the: along and knit it tightly’ into the| Gecrge! LETTER : » Dec. 8-—The gentle-| editorialized form of news) half of the comes second oni; propaga gress. var It is sending out large Sagi per stories on be- yanamid bill, whi sd ly to farm relief on the Federation's legislative iia gram for the coming session of \- SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 192 — NAIL BITING’ Readers often. write to me, ask- some method of treatment their children from biting ir-Zingernails. As far as stop- ping this one unlovely and unsani- tary habit, the cure is very simple. Di the child’s fingers several times daily into a mild solution of alum water. This water will keep the alum on the fingers all day long. After a few days the child will grow disgusted with the gen Ma of the alum which he will = lied with every time he puts ingers in his r:outh. This i: ume cure and always work: it at the same time, it is advisable to remoye the real cause. The nervous child is one who is irritated through improper feeding, and also who lacks the power of controlled thinking because of poor mental training. Many children and even adults develop’ similar queer habits, such as picking the nose, scratching the head, touching eve: lamp-post, stepping on every crac! in the sidewalk, ete. Such people are usually irritated by a toxic state of the body and, though they may have strong mental ywers, they have failed to learn how to con- centrate their mentality into def- inite fixed thought. Their minds are literally 8 hodge; e of miscellaneous ideas ‘| which they have not been able to and that. Americans slivyld not be A a } » He is foi provisions in the law au- cle iahaed Hos octee Aeony he Loic e le rather than priva' interests Theala get the benefit. The classic example of licl owned benetlns oleate {Malia tario, where domestic consumers! against an “That talk about cheap fertilizer] is so much Norris. "replies in the fertilizer industry have rendered ki present equipment at Muscle Shoals Other members lie| obsolete for Te- fes is to get the last time themselves and to back here all costs. . it election returns} horss power «to obtain keep th “It would take about 100,000 the same amount of nitrates at Muscle Shoals which can be obtained elsewhe: fertilizer production. The objects of the private compan- there: for e ef ment out of the power ast ekg enormously and if the power were sold to counties or municipalities their would get much cheaper elec- ty. Incidentally, Norris, in combat- re by the much cheaper new process from 16,000 horse ike the C; that at Muse fertiliser or our power.’ ee ef by the le-handed, Uncle George has fought off Hi F ranamid,| city’s owe panies. onda cae ine bauttbolien and » He have champ can best ernment uses its ‘Ths veteran warrior has th right out ‘and defied the pes Farm Bureau Fi farmer o1 itically acti is enthusiastically su) American Cyanamid to take over that it fehitiser for ‘federation, largest of and the most’ ‘The Federation mans He M A Bhodlen claim: rd a would mean cheaper the farmer, EGAD, FRANKLIN, w< BES Let ME Go IN-THe House Wirt You fon L KNOW How WIVES ° ARE, ~<1F SHE SEEMS WA BELLIGERENT MOOD BECAUSE OF NouR COMING Home AT-THis LATE anne EXPLAIAATHAT I ey toe The PEACE, IN RAIDING A GAMBUNG DEAS power. These bills pay about two cents a kilowatt hour not! properly assemble in thinking to- ward a desired object. A child can be easily trained into good habits of thinking if he is taught to practice certain mental or, physical exercise. A child who pa tices the piano every day will not develop the habit of nail biting. Systemical physical culture exer- channels of constructive | ing. feat pete A geen ie tT ‘woe eval gested, or through adopting s reading schedule, to oe ok int upon some he is "interes which will help hi efficient in his nervous habits. mati JUESTIONS AND ANSWERS in tn envatogen of tos abeeuiany aad an its cause? Is it and can eee eee Answer: You na Te- the abdomen and with Llood. The only way I ine. The ‘trestaunt te pres the same as for Pe or the acon ae ire on these jects. ation: An cises taken once or twice daily will] s also be of great aid in training the| causing child into regular habits of physica] motion. The adult who finds him- self nervously biting his fingernai will find he can develop more m Bob's crypti¢ words, which he re- fused to explain, kept Faith awake @ long two hours. Bob could mean) ry Nils had fallen in love on sight. But for once she would not ry with Bob. Hadn't she seen falli in love scores of times? And had Cherry ever acted like this before? Why, the man re- pelled her ! She had not even been decent to him. Always, when Cher- ty was falling in love, she became more sparkling, more scint more beautiful than ever. An with Nils Cherry had been pale, al- most homely, onal for that queer moment of anger in which she had stamped her foot and called him a bully and a tyrant. : is jb was already acne with morning paper and his gra) fruit when Gherry did enter The ‘pense| dining room, slipping in so noise- forming his much the work and of eal IN NEW YORK New York, 3.—Almos' silent en ition the lease we simply won't have our recorded th in: Manhattan which belies this great reputation f cold, nm for being Jessly that Faith, who was craning her neck to read a sensational head- line, did not know her sister at the table until she heard Rhoda’s eyes, but that he believed Cher-| chair, la i # i a oddly hesitant and sympathetic] roses, greeting: “Good thorning, Miss Cherry. Do ee want French toast or plain? "ve made both.” . “Neither, Rhoda. Just some cof-| pric fee and orange juice, thank you,” Cherry answered in a listless voice. Faith could not keep from star- ing at her sister with open dismay, for Cherry that Thursday morning was hardly recognizable. She was like a flamboyantly bright picture that has been faded in a too-strong sun. There was no rouge on her cheeks or lips; even the glory of her copper-and-gold. curls, raked ted) carelessly back from her forchead, twas on time later. Personally e lor @ amoun' ca ten «olen Bessie’s story is one in the New York courte No MAJOR, BETTER For No To WALK HOME,“THAN N LIMP! TELL You WHat, J Ni. WAIT HERE FOR MEN NF L Come our on TH’ SUMP, “THEN TLL Go Home WITH You, m< AN L ca £ MUZZLE “TH GROWL WHtH was dimmed. There were shadowy smudges beneath her flat, lusterless ® victim of misfortunes has trem-; blingly faced a New York j only to walk a with a : Not lane pha t Crow ng ago Pai @, once one of the most famous of bandits ish # veoken old man, came usual Many) Bat Hy a Hh 3 : e i f oH bat h a : ; E i } rt FE a F Hie ge a E ss i * is a FE — ie le r