The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 14, 1929, Page 4

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toxin, it s 8 moral crime and an act of cruelty. one would not usually expect in a civilized and enlightened country. “Phe. Bismarck Tribune An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDESI NEWSPAPER = UE aanectinaho ddd NICHOLAS’ VICTORY 2 Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- The Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia, gone to his grave £ marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | With the last hopes of the czarists who never could see * as second class mail matter. that history had turned over a new leaf cn them, was a 4 George D. Mann ,..:.,........ President and Publisher | striking example of the ‘way @ man can fail and still be IED +® success, © Deity Pil ro caninagredeneed bis Spee at Lied .. $220] Although Nicholas commanded the armies of one of the Day vy mall, pee aol nar Bismarck) .... 71.20 | allied powers, we can safely say, now, that he was on the Daily by mail; per year, wrong side. He served an autocracy that was corrupt to Ge ruta Ree ma + 5.0} the core, reeking with centuries of oppression and’ mis- rule, The World War tore it down, and it deserved its F fate. Czardom had given the world all that it had to mail, in stat OBE .o.ceceeee: 1.00 , in Wate ties years for ae 2.50]8ive, and it was time for it to give way to something il, outside of North Dakota, a better. - ; eocccccccccscccccccccccccesccscosccecs AL But to Nicholas, imperial Russia was the greatest Audit Bureas of Circulation thing/in the world. He fought for it with bitter tenacity. With inflexible resolution, he sacrificed scores of thou- Member of The Associated Press ; The ted P ts exclusively entitled to the use sands of uncomplaining soldiers in a vain effort to keep for republication of all news dispatches credited to it|the past upon its throne. He served a bad cause, and he or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also/ was beaten. Yet—and here is the point—we admired him. news of spontaneous origin published herein.| when the papers announced that he was dead we felt hts of republication of all other matter herein} that the world had lost @ genuine man and was the poorer for it. Foreign Representatives How is it that a man, tied to a bad cause and over- G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY whelmingly defeated, can win our admiration? Why do NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. we feel that the Grand Duke Nicholas lived well and was CHICAGO DETROIT | essentially a success? Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg.| Consider the circumstances that preceded the final collapsé of the Russian armies. Russia was confusion (Official City, State and County Newspaper) and inefficiency personified. In the court there were doubt, intrigue, disloyalty and corruption. Soldiers were POULTRY SHOW IS EDUCATOR sent out unequipped—driven to the front, often, without ‘What is all this Missouri Slope poultry show about? | ammunition or food. The czar wavered between crafty, It is for the purpose of education, says O. J. Weisner,| self-seeking counselors. Czardom, in its death struggle, the judge who came here from the Agricultural college to | was proving that it did not deserve to live longer. pick the best types of birds on exhibit. But amid all this confusion Nicholas stood, loyal and ‘That is the keynote of it: Education. To get together! brave, like a rock. He dared defy even the czar himself and show poultry that seems worthwhile to raise. Then} in his fight for the right as he saw it. To the end he was to compare this poultry and to discover wherein one bird} unshaken and unperplexed. The men at Petrograd let may be superior to another, to learn, in fact, that some/ nim down again and again; he fought on, using the birds actually are inferior, that there is something about} faulty tools that they gave him: without complaint. them that makes it advisable to drop them out of the] In short, he was a genuine Man, looming large in an breeding flock. The prosperity of the poultry business| edaying welter of half-men. He’ had courage, fidelity depends on quality in the fowl. and endurance, and those qualities are not yet too Mr, Weisner said he was ruthlessly disqualifying birds | common. ‘which fell short of the show type. He said ‘he made this} 1¢ isn't necessary that a man accomplish everything he his rule because the show was intended tc be educational | sets out to accomplish in order to make a successful life. and it was worth more to the exhibitor to learn thatthe manner in which -he goes about it is. what counts. something was wrong than to be soft-soaped into the idea} The true field for accomplishment lies within. If a man ae i Ps * * * * r = 2 ~ : a gee s E Sc OPP PD PDD tga DeS CHILDREN POPPA RLawe AMIDE LoSew APY MBILSe that he had something of quality by being accorded an/ wins in that field it doesn’t matter greatly whether he| ro ‘ unjustified award and thus be kept going wrong. wins elsewhere or not. "3 . ‘The show also is worthwhile from that educational &y Olive Roberts Barton standpoint which Dr, Don McMahan dealt with in his UNFAIR! ©1928 by NEA Service,Inc. Clinic. Poultry growers need to learn more definitely the} What ho, ye golf bugs! Know ye not that Uncle Sam symptoms and nature of poultry diseases and, above all, | has his eye on the ball? < _ the rules and theories of sanitation that will keep down} ‘The Federal Trade commission is taking the golf ball these diseases or free their flocks entirely from them.| industry apart to see what makes the engine knock. It ‘The increasing investment in poultry raising requires} has found objections within the industry.to the practice this, .of some manufacturers of paying professional: players “No government is any stronger than'the laws it can enforce.” No home government is any strong- er than the laws its parents can en- foree. Does this mean that a cat-and- eeDeee may fi hich is nd: | Our Yesterday: | : tottodwn sy sometimes, experienced. when dental bstances, princi weating Head wH Coy She Sast they 20. ee ENCLOSE tse efcd a ge 8 i overcome this condition, such as the injection of glandular extracts, the transplanting of the glands from an- imals into humans, the tying of the ducts leading from the glands, and the stimulation of the glands by ray or medicines, but so far none of these methods have proved permanently satisfactory, the good results, at best, lasting only two or three years with |apparently bad effects. at the end of that time. (Continued in tomorrow's articles) QUESTIONS. AND ANSWERS Germs and.Goitre Question: T,T. M. writes: “I am @ boy of sixteen. -Was told I have a goitre. But my neck is not large ai all—you cannot see a goitre as many people have them. I am afraid that it may later become larger. Could you tell me how I could kill the germ before it takes effect?” Answer: There is no evidence that germs have any effect on producing goitre. The exophthalmic goitre does not show much except to make the eyes protrude. You may suffer from idism, the diagnosis of which must be accomplished mostly by studying symptoms as the gland does not appear to change in shape’ in most cases. All forms of goitre @re caused from the effect of bodily toxins, and the cure depends upon the ./elimination of these poisons. Cracking Jaw expect every child in the f I together “ Question: E. T. writes: “I wonder ag? E E Ee ER dye i Aepee i ge e i ; Se a od i AA obey them every day to the letter. if you could tell me what is wrong expect it, would be the most foolish with my jaw. For a while the joint the .|on the right side was stiff and had a ~ ALLENE SUMNER: ’ tendency to click if I opened my mouth. wide; sometimes it would eS “os crack. Now, every time I chew there ‘The Misses Viola Gentry and Grace| is a gritting sound as if the bones Lyon are planning a trans-Atlantic were rubbing.” Answer: The trouble in your ja may be caused from arthritis, or it two tyrants at the head. FORTY YEARS AGO Mrs. J. M. Quinn has as her guest her father, Rev. David Wirt of Med- Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Griffin. have gone to St. Lawrence county, New — Kf i e Ey gs | Mr. and Mrs. Asa Fisher have as a guest Ralph Wheelock, editor of the | , suing ‘i «,| Howland, for divorce, thinks that it “Gol. Willian “Thompson. celébraled||is She claimed that his insistence on jhis 75th birthday anniversary ®liong skirts made her “an object of reception. i ridicule.” Whether the judge is duly horrified TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ‘AGO or not, it does not take much imagin- R. N. Stevens’ has gone to Chicago/| ation to realize just how much trag- geal ni Miss Grace Moore of Red Oak, line was as’adamant as the-laws Of ttowa, will spend the winter here with | Wows probably try to do the ddle out nickels to run the house F. P. Leamy, Steele, is spending the Bismarck. « The show is a remarkably good one. A very fine|for using their ball exclusively. Another objectionable * Quality of birds of many breeds has been assembled to-| practice is the giving of prize money and free balls to|tender little hides when the least jot £ gether. ‘They cannot fail to encourage the breeders and| professionals winning with the donor's brand of goit|® tittle of the family commandments | Blane ligged pabiie msde about Chis) grest of food | ball. It does not. : It means that the fam- |ical Lake, Oregon. & supply. The exhibits are a convincing fact to the entire} One has heard of commercialized baseball, commercial-|ily commandments should be so rea- * — Slope country that in poultry is one possibility of success-| ized football and commercialized horseshoe pitching, but |SOnable, so easy to obey, that their en- $ ful diversified farming for it, that no program of this! this is the first time the anclent and honorable game of {Teement, will he practically assured. }gone to St. Lawrence county : 4. kind of farming in this country should omit the hen. golf has been dragged into the mire. It may come to pass] A certain family ze boys stood in i & Nor the turkey. It is not due to mere chance that the| that one will not dare swing a mashie without first as-|daily terror of a family law that read: # show has such a fine display of this American bird. Thé| suring himself that the name of the maker is erased from| “ANY boy who comes down for break- ‘* large number of exhibits of the Thanksgiving and/ the ball. ibe ae eel aie thes ee Mitchell Republican. % Christmas fowl is there because Slope growers have been] should the’ trade commission forbid these trade prac-|fitteen minutes late, cupeeci# moins 4 ‘able to make a success of turkey culture. Because also/ tices of the golf ball industry, it, to be consistent, will he t » that they are making money on Mr. Tom. Because,|compelled to outlaw advertisements in which notables # moreover, there is a greater future ahead for this form|express their fondness for @ particular brand of cigar-| chronically Hied wekeood chhlanteeee of poultry growing. ette, their preference for a certain make of radio or | bill considerably. He almost always ¥ In. time it may be possible for the show to be s0| automobile, or their choice of bathroom color schemes.| missed one meal and sometimes two # quartered that the educational side may be expanded.| and to carry the rule one step further, it would be found|" three. Starvation did not—could| to look after business matters. ¢ Merely showing the birds is not all that a poultry show!to be unfair practice for Colonel Lindbergh and Gene| "Cue him of his unpunctuality, eae % Should provide. There should be a series of lectures by| ‘Tunney to declare their political favorites in advance of| ine Baka S oo experts, as there always is something to learn, even-by an election. . the Medes and Persians, it was an-|‘Mrs. Jesse O. Pearce. «the ordinary expert chicken man. The greater the skill nounced that any span Nt hie — & a 2 house by four fifteen got a s qi ee anne. Pit into irdincrgronnd athlete oe ie We're getting along so well with Mexico these days|The result at first was satisfactory| 21>: $ bilities of it as a side of North ® farming. that it almost seems we're no longer neighbors, encugh from a military point. of view. ¢ Bismarck says to the show folks, as Sam Heiges, a noted Lav’ and order obtained and the small poultry authority, used to say: “Here's to the American ‘hen. May her son never set.” fry were in the pan right on the . a | mark every aay at four fifteen. But, eventually they. discovered | Editorial Comment that on days they could not possibly SERVING A COMMUNITY be home on time’they were punished, The Burleigh county chapter of the Red Cross re- CAN YOU BEAT THAT! blag etalaa open bck reptie nok elected its officers at the annual meeting Friday after- (Cincinnati Enquirer) They took to coming in when they ‘They had t d and had proved 100 per Over in Russia it is announced the new marriage rules got ready, and their switchings as Sach wervicn givers: and penualtons are designed to prevent. the husband from something unpleasant and inevitable but not prohibitive. © \ Tt is not an easy matter to find in a community serv-| And have they new rules and regulations allowing the . \s fceable people who are willing to give their time and en-| arth to keep right on revolving on its axis? Eres ao geet ‘ergy freely where there is no remuneratioh to attract nor THE COLLEGE RUSH forre law. When’ Will some parents pportunity for. conspicuous gratification in deeds well LL Yearn that? All ‘qhedience must be (done. Red Cross work goes on rather impersonally. One bes mene) founded upon respect.’ Punishment, ‘thinks of the movement rather than its personnel. Its , official heads serve almost with anonymity, whether in RRR Ca raemDd Sioa le RPE Hee PPE TRILL PA MEALE no. premium on respect, you may be sure. ‘The laws of every home should: be. Peamnnble: n, Charen Sie ARR ‘The re-elections in the Burleigh county chapter are -"1 psa visas Inttestation'to the generous spirit of service that animates| faster the heads of the county organization. It is also a certifi- feation to the quality of their service, of their efficiency conducting the large program that local work involves, children well educated. The wealth of the country any of them retire because and when their own affairs/has much to do with college attendance, just as it does may not permit them to give thelr attention longer to| With the ownership of automobiles, radios and other lux- {the organization, the vacancy should be received by the community to be competed for in the filling. Whether RECIPROCITY WITH CHINA that attitude ever develop or whether successors to the aoe (Kansas City Star) Present staff have to be drafted, the community will be: hinese give us gunpowder. But what would they fortunate if it be able to enlist the same type of free |4° without the washing powder we gave them? sv at So gin by Mn Pret Gonna edn charset oP Ba A of the executive committee; Judge W. L. Nuessle, first made white paper. But the yellow vice chairman; J. L. Bell, treasurer, and their staff of is distinctly a local product. 5 : {associates on the advisory council and in Junior work Chinese discovered tea. But America furnishes leupervision. E the feet. But-feminine were first to grow rice. But we are the thought of throwing it. feat Gave us Mah Jongg. But 'the income tax AEE ii rls i especially corporal punishment, puts|of Garrison. ‘ OUR BOARDING HOUSE -~ ‘The handsome cut glass yase dis- played.in Remington’s window during the holiday season was presented to ‘Warden ‘Boucher by the guards at the Penitentiary. TEN YEARS AGO Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Logan of Oakes are vsiting at the home of Dr. Logan’s mother, Mrs. Austin Logan. M. Conklin of Jamestown was: here for a visit with his son, F. L. Conklin. Mr. and Mrs. John Bortell:have as Ben Mooney, who has been con- wanna, Oe, "ae See ee Re mE ‘aria , Oy» for ie Bismarck for a short visit... tle, all 1 x « 1741—Birthday of Benedict Arnold. South (Declarer)—- 181¢—Daniel Webster delivered his area y ¥ hae 4 ~ ftet-speeck. . - ; 9o7 O658 4A85 + Bou He this the one i

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