Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_ BAGE FOUR ne . The Bismarck Tribune ter An Independent Newspaper istreet, and behind the man whose cat hed | ‘THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER |stalled, there seemed a million angry voices] « % _ (Established 1873) dita honking raucously, The Seuaratcan Hee ‘ b: Bis: k Tribune Compang,|the creature, twitted it, petted, abjured it, ar- i Bismarck “and entered at the postoffice at/gued with it, remonstrated, The car simply | Bismarck as second class mai) matter. . would not budge—and the impatient démands | George D. Mann... of the motorists’ horns behind him grew loud- : Subscription Rates Payable In Advance er and more insistent. penne l a tari + Daily by carrier, year .. Just as the spark in the car had died, so the . 2 / 26 t Daily by mally per pens, (in Bismarck) ......4++ 180lspark of patience in the man’s heart missed 7 PY, DEBTS eal DISEASR thirty-five cents a Bound, is really } Daily by mall, per year, fire. With the crank he belabored the beastly PSA b / Worry. and anxiety play lange | more tasty ai (in state outside Bismarck) .. . fcked fl \ Y/ : Fi / part in the production of énerv- | expensive steak at twice the price. ‘ - kota mtraption over the hood and radiator, kic iin r tion ‘which impairs functional ac- me ee oe of North De it, cursed it, punched it, and went his way. beer __THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Man Shows His Supremacy : It was a busy hour in an East St. Louis A Modern Atlas : Dr. McCoy will gladly answer - + Weekly by mail, in mate, mel oer 4 There are times like that when man simply R Rersonal ‘qusiticns 60 health ‘and : e os i ; care : ot iad Se anid MET Nari Daketee Ber as must show his supremacy. . , : mers oll ctor ta iritating 19 toss at bed him, of EE ics ac cece. ces ckubctsaasedss. deodeoce . ki ‘ a ce Te ee \ lo no ve joney iy year ei Sai alain of Cpiaioe Sixty-nine buildings are completéd each day 7 |thete debts. annie, 8 atansped addressed eee ee eee in New York, but you can’t make a man who is| . 3S Yi / 1 creat men tell me there are ¢ four * Member of The Associated Press having a house built here believe it. We / } classes Prospects y The Associated Press ix exclusively entitled to the . 2 deal Sine io Son. ae First clas axtomabtie are mach: Grau tarnes use for republication of all news ‘ispatches credited to sons buy things |than when yo. try to kee; veh wor it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the 7 ‘ > , ich they never expect to pay. | payments on a car the p ties’ of whicn local news of spontaneous origin published byl All Editorial Comment : i y /; Of course, this class is not bothered|wculd fit only the wealthy men’s ’ fights of republication of all other matter herein are very much by worrying over its| purse. i ake EES Ea oe ‘sl Tagging the Lobbyists f debts. It seems that many people in| The workman who today receives Forelen Representatives (afilwaukee Journal) ies : owe duct ensigh wortzing: sd Gus [ eRe has av betor Shee Matte ‘ waukee Journal o : G. LOGAN PAYNE CORNY aeRO Congress is expected to take up the question two should not worry about the-same | within his income than He did a few CHICAGO hs debt. years ago When he received only ‘ Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. |of lobbying. One proposal, made by an influen- ‘Then there is the class that is|two.dollats @ day. ‘The cost of liv. 4 PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH tial group in the house, is that registration be 3 onli] well able to afford all neconsities, ing has not increased anywhere near \-NEW YORK “ya yea Fifth Ave. Bldg. |required of all lobbyists. This includes sworn ‘ rr as well as luxuries. Mermbers A in proportion, but still, man create i "| 'd County Newspaper) statements from lobbyists of their fees and =! orred ye hig worry, but are often poe Seana, ae te by —_Mificial City, State and County Newspaper) _ _lexperises. A second proposal, apparently mote om: The someinth fy thliee AE the dental a Modern Miracle Workers generally supported than the first, is for legis- people te divided fit two classes—| QUESTIONS AND AN3WERS «+ *. Modern busi ; tt f advertising. |lation forbidding former senators and former RA ‘ se who carefully their juestion: ©. L. T. writes: “A : lodern business 1s a matter ol ad 8: atid " he fl f budget #0 they will be able to pay | yellowish semi-soMd substance col- People no longer follow the ancient custom of |representatives from appearing on the floor o 4 j for all necessities, and who do not|lecta duting the mpht on, the. roof igbing to market to purchase the few necessary |congress, as lobbyists, during debate on bills j contract for the purchase of luxur-|of my mouth. Will you please tell articles that were required by the family, and |which interest them. 4 : . ies which att nd, their means. /me what cause: this, and a way to ; ; j ve had sed up-| Registration ‘will probably not remedy the 2 r _ dt 7 In this ra e ng age there | prevent it? ; which the merchant may have had exposed up: es donhected with lobbying, Nie Bh is the other class which causes the] Answer: The substance which * ‘on his shelves or tucked away under the coun-}Many abuses connec : Mey - j e greatest trouble to the collector or|collects in your mouth during the * ter-or behind it fn tiers of drawers that were| merous states use the registration system, but y Sf} j d credit man. These are the people | night is probably caused from bac- never opened unless the customer inquired for| the sweeping generalities of the statutes usual- é who live beyond their incomes and, | terial growth and no doub’ comes ‘ “the goods that were thus hidden away. ly permit the veiling of the ultimate employer. besides buying the necessary things from not keeping your teeth and < rch: us the|In these states, lobbying has not decreased Bom f ee li si ae ai his|Materially, A Federal statute, more carefully ‘wares. He not only tells what he has got, but|Phrased, might accomplish more. As for the | “he illustrates his advertising space with pic-|invasion of the house and senaté floors by the a ~-<ett ce 4 . | ve hired for their pre- tures of the various articles either singly or |lame ducks who have been r ; ‘artistically grouped, He gives prices and faith-|sumed influence, that hardly seems to require TASI I INGTON ‘fully descrbes each article, so that the reader|!egislation. Surely\the house and senate rules ; . i vised in guch manner as to prohibit ‘may thus obtain a very clear understanding of |¢4" be revise a ‘what is offered for sale, its price and, if it is|Such unwarranted behavior. [ ETTER ; “a credit house, the terms and conditions of sale. | open ee he D ooh, 4 ran David It is this variety of advertising that has created Finds at City of Dav * a demand for thousands of articles that Sala a eave ae ea eet ab ye ws sag Peg ogg ~ ben ana ee ; ve sold had they not been advertised; important have been the results of the las: ' : 8 ot ; fouds; Rad selecting © diet uw Po ae ctining is the maiuspring of business. [season's exeavations at Jerusalem conducted by |, Washington, Dec, 1¢—The ‘pepei:| president would recommend nothing [Cheerrance of the law, continoed “Many who are reading this article|thing made from cereals er flows, A a A ‘ at i dent's message to the new Congress than a bill to enable the federal enforcement effort and pass- i It is the creator of business and the source of |the Palestine exploration fund it is hoped that] ikes especially interesting read: dartment of Agriculture to ae age of appropriations. This year he bon Rerecagr on breed *Siliousnesh, Seen pte facie maki: a nation’s prosperity. Advertising tells the/much of the mystery which stil surrounds the| ing in conjunction with hix message | prompt information on crop pros-| urged nothing. but pointed to facte| on at and disord t exerci tourist where to £0, how to go and how to get|history of the City of David will be dispelled |to the last Congress two years ago.| pects, supply, demand, imports, ex-|of the situation ana prothsed con-| which pid dee oth orton ey Fists _ crac} inntag het Saat j the benefit of the money he has to spend upon| within the next year or two. He made it known that he left out | ports and so Bg tinued federal gnforcement effort. fort, and the poisonous effects of|There is a slight ip near the W | — / . 8] e Y we which they can afford to purthatie,|m@uth perfectly clean.» Brush your . f . ° these people optimistically run into | teeth two or three times daily, spend. J VOW ) , . debt for luxuries which they have a|ing at least five minutes each time, ' wet hc pee. slim chance of paying for. They|after which brushing rinse your are essentially honest, but do not| mouth with some mild antiseptic, kro ein’ an Eth os a proper such <Y ne: alll erat for the “ ion” ice ween eir income and/| prevention pyorrhea. cbr) We abi nt neue in] Schau FMS ope | dunt inetd yr: “ in debt, a ause iy sty, ase me a list of it Competition, but everything necet-| and desire to do the right thing, they |do not produce fat” sary to guard our interests must be/are forced to worry and fret over| Answer: The foods which pro- done. wl a betel ee rl sn oe fen are = pate Tnaheod Taking up prohibition, two) other thing for these peop! . 0 PRS re La ‘worry except to|can be said to be non-fat-forming. years ago the president urged state/ et into the third class I mention,|There are hundreds of these other ¢6-operation in enforcement, public|of those who live within their in-| foods, and in selecting a diet all you ry aA F r ai site| s for lack of space, but . - his. vacation. Advertising builds mills, rail- A In 1924 the remains of the original Jebusite he discuss 28 mibyects in only 21! The president told the new Con-| Two years ago the president dis- work ee inventory of Soureelf acad searery ceding pack oe, roads, great industries, and in fact everything|city captured by David’ were uncovered. This| pages as compared with 26 subjects|gress that the past year has seen} cussed foreign relations only as af-| your finances, and see if a good deal| Answer: ‘All exercises which that enters into the life and prosperity of a|city, afterwards known as the City of David, |in 26 pages in December, 1925. Sub-|a marked improvemerft in agricul. fecting Europe and the Far East.|of your worry is not over the cost of |tense the muscles of the upper. back nati Tt keeps the trains moving, the ships| was situated at the southern end of the great divisions of the 1925 ture’s general condition, although| This year and less at length, hé high living. You may have been}wili help you to straighten up and sti eep: a 1, PI , A did not appear this the farmers had not fully recovered | mentioned Mexico and Ni complaining about the high cost of |develop normally shaped shoulder sailing, the airplanes flying, and gives employ-jeastern ridge in the center of which stood the) Court, Bu get, Foreign Debt, Immi-|from the postwar depression. The|e hope for continued] living, but be honest with yourself; |The best exercises for this purpose ment to millions of people who would otherwise|temple area. On the oppogite side of the ridge| gration, Reclamation, Retirement of|farmer must be assisted only in|friendly relations with Mexico take a paper and pencil and sit down|are taken while lying face down- find existence a problem. formerly ran the Tyropoeon Valley now prac-|Judges, Mothers’ Act, Civil Service, | working out “his vation.” satisfaction with the clean-up in| and make a careful analysis of your|ward. . An excellent one to take Read the advertisements... They are of vital|tically filled with debris, and it is here that|Federal Trade Commission and Gov-| Mr. Coolidge reiterated some. of | Nicaragua.:~ Elsewhere the Presi financial condition. If you are liv-|while lying in this position is to importance. They may save many dollars in|the director of the British school of archeology before or pare eters cel eh ofitNors Hares be Rocke Seercatncen scant seed being eh peer re y asily clasp ee tees, Leaay = neeend the expenditures necessary to every household.|at Jerusalem and the assistant director have| Aviation, Pan-American Air Mail,| statement, urged curtailment of sur-| pages 4 and 6 aviation and sir saail Sliminate. the worry by a few as high as Possible, relaxing “to, the been working during the last season with funds Seren i ee ora oe Plus acreage ana finally proposed | service to Mexico and South Amer-| changes in your everyday habits and} floor and raising alternately from Children Again supplied by the fund of Sir Charles Marston. {ban Parcel Fost, Protective Ta ae federal board of men experienced |ica, more good roads to all principal! curtailing of your expenditures to| ten to fifteen times. Do this exer- : Ay 4 eRe) hil di is now in England, and has|£2°™, Loan_ System, Floor ntrol,|in marketing to assist co-operatives | points south of the Rio Grande with|fit your purse. You may: find that|cise-two or three times daily and Christmas is for the children; it is a chil-| The director is now in England, and has) areriean Indian, Petroleum Con-|in orderly marketing and handling | Americon engineering co-Operation| you can really enjoy a thirty cent| others similar which tend to dren’s holiday. But we all can become children prepared a-report on the work in which he| servation, Education, Department of| surpluses not due to wilful over- and removal of the parcel-post bone , ducation, | ; : icture sh dol- sf again, if only for this season, and without any|states he uncovered ancient walls which may | Labor, Public Buildings and His- Production, with provision for a low |of contention with Cu ae sthastter 86 al aa a: Uiree ao}, [strengthen the sruscloe: of ‘be upper int ‘ harm, either, be grouped in three periods: torical Celebrations. erest revolving seep a a Most important among the other The blind faith with which the child awaits} The second century B. C. and the timewf the Like ats Tera re hee the, Co-|new recommendations was that for Santa Claus is needed a great deal more in a|wars between the Maccabees and the Syrian pa. Hy ‘ut’ on. three iinp ve nt Sacend Westin Me Meanahite ee a sash caesar! ; . ang Tr \ } world grown callous and skeptical, in a world be-| kings. . subjects President Coolidge has/the president held, material tari } : come too “smart,” too cynical, too matter-of-| The period from the second.to the fourth|changed his attitude. | These are] reduction would be disastrous to the {Old Masters | _ Anne *” @um fact. And unless we catch, somehow, some of|century A. D. Muscle Shoals. More/ cruisers, of| ‘Twe "years ago, the president said asters ss : aha: ” that Sweet faith, the day shall pass for us| The Byzantine period of the fifth and sixth) course, are held to be necessary as) Muscle Shoals should be developed |®—-———______——®| | Faith laughed, A sudden ‘men-/she was always in hot water with without meaning ‘and without joy. centuries, the result of the failure of the Ge-|primarily for nitrates. Since then, |The elm lets fall its leaves before | tal. Picture of Cherry's, beautiful, Roout boreal ana ameieici Christmas brings happiness to those in whose| “The walls we assign to the first of these |I0h, “tnve ‘altered the complcnioa| ter, oops en nat nate te athe ee STORE cows shivering anai| looked awhen, Nils hed. announced to| get every tan she met Kirt as eras hearts the beautiful image of Santa Claus is/groups,” he said, “consist of two very massive| of the Muscle Shoals problem, but| that nitcates cannot be successfully pods ae he did not like her very/about here. But it was pretty clear a living and @ real creature. It cannot bring|structures which look like the sides of a great|the president's remarks on agricul-| produced at Muscle Shoals owing to| The trees are barten when the sum- ah he AREY she, wos | ae aon he Ray eke se pare pleasure to the people who “do not believe.” It/gate in a wall running along the west side of | ture obviously wete a concession to|new and cheaper methods and that mer’s lost: ‘ ee ae ona en he epee Seek Bee ene 3 boy ed can bring no peace on earth to those who have|the City of David. The finds of most general | Pounce, for, mile hoting, o great |the project is now “mostly con-| “But one tree keeps its goodness | resistibly funny. | Them set nlating | Wiley. and he lept her guessing, by turned away from their old acceptance of the |interest include walls of such dimensions that] president was willing t0 go consid: |'He agcere ott Norris_and, thus wisi young man who was watching her| having affairs-with other girls. But Christmas symbol of love and good cheer and|it is reasonable to regard them as city walls, If|erably further before. : disagrees with the American Farm i i bre Dna depen eacamnaeee caged bg thorns Graven gan pen te a ee ce siving. PP nt gy cei dns, np page roo bg Mig Geng opr goth on Mgr ye Thow art chyself beneath whatever| “But Nils.” she’ laughed, as she love with him and left him. Faith— | _ Sante: Claus brings, most of all, the spirit|kernel of these walls is to be carried back|** page, 16 ¢ page Ss Linked with its power, feveteeh Ate sopbeakiee ces laid @ friendly hand upon his arm,|do you mind if 1 call you Faith? | of giving and if that were all he brought, he|through Nehemiah to the Hebrew monarchy|the protective tariff and the farm|forthiose development insived of ite My shelter from all winds, my own Thank vou! ny a ae has carried a precious burden. The gift is aljand even earlier,” loan system, it received nearly four | obsolete equipment. ng pine, been . Been in love ages ae ua aes ‘ mark of love, of the kind of love that breaks fs cel A pages, as compared with a page and]. ' see tis summer, has held out apainst hee. Think | right out of full heart to the whole world, the ‘A Little Man on a Big Horse halt Mc: Coclidee, osid:aericul-| yeah catetbed isk ates oate el Aus Wie Tin Pink met minute! Ten’ that right?” kind of love that wishes all men well, unpre- (Minneapolis Journal) ture as a whole had improved in| national defense and warned against ———_—_— Nan f ae Soe agit | meditated love, Once more a little man on horseback casts; the previous three or to years,| competitive armaments, This year, : i clasped hands.” “T believe youre a) } Ty cdg diye dqg eg te thon intone, on|his shadow, albeit a short one, athwart the ha that many. lenahaentae women laa giles wit ae ecu ‘ right, Nils. That may exp in a ; | the streets, omes, the time is at hand| Oklahoma prairie. Even as did that other Okla-| tion” bh wal “protebly tonic letresed tie aided. of: : you.” many things about Cherry that for the birth of that great love. homa governor, J. C. Walton, ,| porary.” ‘The farmers, he wag con-| tary and: ne . Tol geianed we—hurt me.” f B {s the great proof that we must “ae Henry 8. Johnston at tae mil Wineed, did ‘not, want. any “govern. mest ‘om aval 2 ; ena f 4 be afte tis FR ny go! Lae glib athe Dee that ae eons tary to protect his tenure of the gubernatorial | men ellie nor any azmam of ended," very ruben! som tr , “nd ig? dar: [be eapetting me fo Pursue he | again, TW [Westigate his offical conduct, and probably to| 1” <2 i Setenitaraleroepert |mone Stmarias spe alpen eae si impeach him. ‘e a ; Lax and Stupid A special session of the Legislature, called by ' _Whenthe national crime commission reports |members after the Governor refused to call it, | that the ted States not only has more crime|he terms an “insurrectionary meeting,” prob- 4 other country but the worst system|ably on the ground that the State Supreme | of criminal statistics, it is only making public|Court already has h Id such ssembl. what everyone who seriously studied erie to be apie valid ig Neti ‘Wherefore tea i . ‘The treads: | State's troops ane oleae o- e interpose bay- CARD IT AM SENDING ouT- Tor: * ae he onets between the Solons and their seats in the > S it will : nor how many criminals are ap-|Capitol Building. CHRISTMAS ANDTHE NEW YEAR, But prehandeds tried, convicted, reformed OF de-| "A foolish course, st best, but having its tragic] | ANE M~-m-? "CENTURIES HAVE se ’ criminals,’ sibilities in a region that w: iginally set- \ sGeTHe PME ME GIs palace tat, tens tavel ht chiefly with sixsshooters. WELDED “ode THER “THRU “THE —— added that we do not know with If the self-convoked session of the Legisla- \ CEMENT OF “TIME, uc THE SAHARA 1 3 NEXT: Nils ‘gives a character t ture is illegal, as the Governor contends, then APPEARS NEW TRODDEN, BUT // “To GIVE "EM £ CGorrtights 1957 NEA: Se-vice, Inc.) - We just gojit can do him no harm, An impeachment by RESTLESS DESERT WINDS HAVE A SLIGHT IDEA : ia , building substantially the same|an unlawfully a’sembled Jagislatare would be, REFILLED A MILLION- RE WHAT Youre : : 1 - for the most various types of quickly quashed by the courts. The day when TRAC ScoRE _——— —- Gg subjecting all to practically the same|there was “no law west of Fort Smith” has pg oad = po agen j . 4 gone. ; ' BUT ; at a hation Which prides itself on its in-| But {f the self-convoked ‘session fs legal, and| - K,~< AND FRIEN: a ? “etticieney should be so lax and stupid|if its decrees are le. of making trouble for Poi pe as pros aay that threatens all industry and de-|the Governor—if it really has power to im- “4 and vy would be incredible|peach him and make the impeachment stick facts. then he has no more right to send soldiers to , conese the pete than “4 would have to ‘use. reak wu i - Y dibses sesti troops ip & sitting of the Su. Y society preme Court. ig black as midnight. A] If Governor Johnston has turned but the mili- : ing : 500 feet up in the sky, to interfere with a meaningless, powerless | AB bp e, disp : f : futile legislative session, as he himself con- |— By W oy into the streets and tends, then he is stultifying himself. 6 ; saa tac PS If he has turned out the military to prevent tates the thrpat, And/|an impeachment that would hold water in court, toe a, os fs ape aly nel ee a uckler, pical London winter climate; “Theja schemer of itical violence, taking. ; he went up against this (models not Wasbington eed v0 Be co! one