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saermcemecemay Bat ate oe Httee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE) Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, at. D. as Secund Class Matter. x Editor | GEORGE D. MANN . Sohn ts, - Foreign Representati: f | G SAGAN PAYNE COMPANY ‘ H1LaGO 8 DETROIT tien Jepers, which, it is estimated, is the probable arquette Big vc cake ty sur @ Bldg. | bor scattered through tie leugih and breadth of | Fifth Ave. Bldg.|the world. <W YORK he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use The tor publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise! this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are reserved. ‘ slso Z MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | ——— ee | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE 1N ADVANCE ly by carrier, per year .......sesee0 $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) ... oo 1.20 Daily. by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ... «+ 6.06 pene ttt ata debate THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) > THE REAL REASON Russia cannot be re-admitted into the family of na-| tions until she obtains a government truly represent-| ative of the. Russian people instead of Lenin and} Trotsky. So say the other governments of the world. The real reason why the world cannot do business | with the Soviet government of Russia today is not that it is not representative of the people of Russia, | but because the Soviet government, represents an idea that is at war with the ideas of the rest of the| world. The whole conception of property righis, | andthe laws andgovernment based upon them, has} been reversed: ift ‘Soviet Russia. The world does not |’ like this idea; it does not want this'idea; it thinks it has discovered as a result of what has happened in Russia that this idea would be bad for the world; that it does not make for happiness, but misery. That is why the American government refuses to do business with Soviet Russia. Representative gov- ernment has, nothing to do with the matter. The American govgrument can do business with Persia, Afghanstan, or any other. nation ‘under the sun in spite of their forms of government provided there be a basis of agreement that the status of things as they have been built up in past centuries of civiliza- tion shall not be changed. The United States got along with every nation in the world when it'was the: only republic in the world. : | If Henry Ford jitneyizes the railroads it is to be hoped that each train will be equipped with self- starter and shock’ absorbers. i : YOU HAVE A HANDICAP? READ THIS! What do you think of a man who has made himself successful during the 15 years he. has been paralyzed, | flat on-his: back? ‘ : That’s the record of Lee Mabry, of Albemarle, N.C. ‘ Tiding on a wagon load of wood, 1 —then a Jad The wood piled! on top of lim, crushing part of his backbone and breaking his left arm, right leg and collarbone. The spinal injury left him permanently paralyzed of motion and feeling from the heart down. ' Did Lee give up the fight and mope? Not much! He became a storehouse of sunshine—conceived the idea of publishing a paper, ‘Sunny South Sun- shine.” This little paper with a big message emerged from Lee’s prison héme to ‘spread good cheer. f The paper reached a circulation of 6000, with over 2000 copies sent free to ‘‘shut-ins”’ all over the coun- try. Then came the war. Prohibitive prices of pa- per forced Lee to stop publishing. 20-—Wus iduhed du ike ground, ‘der the direction of the U. 8. Public Health Service. | |where, to a combined effort for the eare of two mil-| \tifie and inhuman to regard the leper as an outeast. | | porch wear, | Minot to sueceed Fred L. Anderson: appears to have for now there is a place where these leprous people may be cared for humanely, and it is to be done un-: This is but a beginning in the program of winning governments in all lands, and humane citizens eve v=} Leprosy is only feebly contagious, and then by pro-| longed contact. For this reason alone, it is unscien-} The trouble is not in; our laws, but in their non- enforcement. Will the next Congress be the first to put the rift in thrift. Speaking of profiteering birds; ihe ‘robbin? sea-| son is about over. i Won't it be a shame if disarmament takes the spurs off some of our swivel chair officers? Another important thing about July Fourth is that the first roastin’ ears usually appear that day. ! jg ana Our stenographer friend wonders - if pounding | typewriter keys will cause ‘‘telegraphers’ paralysis.’”| The Girl Next Door says that the darker shades should prove to be very popular for summer front-| Russian artist tells Chicago that paintings would cure criminals. A realistic’ picture of the electric ehair might help. A Fable: Once Upon a Time there was a Para- grapher who did Not try to write Something Funny | about the Einstein Theory. i Perhaps the Boston geologist who claims the Gar-! Gy course; by the time Zippy Zebra) ‘And the shoe?” asked Mrs. Ostrjeh, den of Eden was located in Ohio is simply oiling somebody for a federal job. | i — i In our favorite:self-serve we see many instances} wherein the services of Mr. Bambino Ruth, the emi- nent fly-swatter, might bé effectually employed. The new Mammoth Cave’in Kentucky was empty, so the hordes of thirsty treasure-seckers from 47 other states may as well turn around, and go home. MINOT, POSTMASTERSHIP IN CONTROVERSY. The matter of the appointment of a pastmaster for encountered, one of those obstacles cominonly called | snags and which are very familiar in such campaigns. | The News understood until recently that Martin} Jacobson, was the candidate accepted in Waghington| and would very probably obtain the appointment. It! appears, however, that the higher-ups in the Republi- can party are now working along divergent lines in the matter and several candidates are receiving sup- port: Mr. Jacobson is stated to have the strong backing} of Gunder Olson, national committeeman for North Dakota and one of the leading Republicans in this state. 5 EDITORLAL REVIEW | “every day, writing cheery letters to a wide circle of _ these words: “Cheer up!”’ * ourselves by overeating, lack of exercise, corigestion, | _ late hours and dissipation. : Senator Porter J. McCumber is stated to be fav-| orable to'the candidacy of B. E, Stewart. Senator E. F. Ladd and Rep. J. H. Sinclair are re-| ported to be working’ for the/ appointment of L. A. ‘Corey: ie | ‘| There is also talk heard of a ‘‘dark horse’’ as the | usual suggestion for breaking a deadlock and obtaine| . jing ‘an effective compromise. “Who such a ‘dark! Incidentally, isn’t his ‘life story enough to make| horse’ is likely to be is not yet 'stated. A nuns | the’ rest of us ashamed: of the things we eall ‘‘handi-|ber of other candidates, tentative and otherwise, are! caps’’ and “troubles”? : It seemed as if his castle had crumbled. But de- termined not to become a burden on any one, he now tries to support himself by getting subscriptions to; | magazines, He-works steadily at his typewriter | | friends, most of whom he has never seen. | And every letter he sends carries on the outside lim the field and there is no lack of willin’ Barkises | a wooo {lin the emergeney.—Minot Daily News. : | Man, has the, sgrangest constitution of any living} things* No animal eould stand the abuse we heap on: | TIME TO WAKE UP. | More than fifty thousand citizens of Minneapolis! !failed to participate in Monday’s primary. The to-! -|tal vote was less than a hundred thousand, while the | ‘number of those who are entitled to vote, as shown | by the total registration last November, is a hundred | and fifty thousand: ‘ | LEPROSARIUM In the announcement made by the Public Health Service that a Louisiana site has been selected for! the location of a National Leprosarium, there is more | Indifference, the weather, various other cireum-} than ordinayy interest. First of all, this is because /stances account for the fuct that one out of*every | the “Louisiana Bite offers the only place in North |thrée voters in Minneapolis failed to take part in the; , America to which the government was invited to primary. Twenty: thousend of those who had taken { come. The location selected is the former state col-/the trouble to register permitted themselves for one| ony for lepers, where more than a hundred people reason or another.to be kept away from the polls. have been in residence and cared for under state su-} No. doybt, the certainty that Leach and Van Lear pervision. ‘ ;would be the two-nominec:: for, Mayor furnished an Few people in North América realize that there are | excuse for many electors to: stay away, in the com- one or more lepers in 20 different states of the union, !fortable assurance that they could cast votes that and leading experts estimate the total number of! would really count on June J3. people in the United States who are afflicted with i Well, the primary is wafer that has gone under the) leprosy as anywhere from 500 to 2,500. As a matter | bridge. The election of June 13.will be decisive. of self-protection, the public could do no less than/Upon the fifty thousand civic slackers who dodged} arrange to segregate the lepets of the United States itheir duty last Monday will depend the result. [t is} in order to stay the spread of the disease. It*has'up to them to say whether Minneapolis is to go for-| been shown in other countries that the establishment! ward along the path of sane, progressive develop-| ‘of segregation camps will most effectively eradicate | ment. | leprosy. While this is in‘mind‘as an ultimate objece | Nor, is the issue confined to the Mayoralty, by any | tive, it is good to realize that lepers inthe United;means. That may easily be saved by merely getting | States are being treated as human beings, and no | the full vote ont. Birt the Couneil and School Board longer will it be nee to have such -startling are also Socialist objectives, and a desperate effort is headlines appear in the newspapers as: ‘‘Leper at|to be made to control them for radical exploitation. large in this city,’ ‘‘Leper escapes from guard,” ete,,!=-Mimneapolis Journal. ‘ I Y P cou Q SCENE ON MAIN “TWENTY MINUTE OWERE, PUT ADVENTURES By Olive Barton Roberts STREET — 5 AFTER SOME CIRCUS POSTERS US ON Dopt RBURKHARPTS: BARN -: OF THE TWINS | said “boot” ‘to’ Mrs. Ostrich, “she ‘thought that. her young friend with the stripes had suddenly gone crazy. She went. over and nudged her hys- band with her ‘wing and pointed at Zippy and said’ she suspected all along that something was. wrong with ‘him, But Mr. Ostrich said, *Nonsense!". and strode right over to, Zippy an demanded to know what he meant by: talking slippers and shoes and boots | and things: the way he was doing. Zippy looked\ ever so surprised. “Why it: isu't’ any secret, I'm sure,” he answered. “I'll tell you all about it.” EAN Ns Nancy“and Nick and Flippety-Flap} behind the’ bobash-Vush’ leanad for: ward 't0“iisten, for ‘they, too, wished to'know, exactly what'Zippy had’ been talkin, eee one else) fn the circus parade, I call Beretta! Nodiden "a rdee Noted iter). (RDN jummer:: Madness” ‘One'of ‘the strongest indorsementa ever given, a motidn’ picture by the editor of, an influential motion pic- ture tradéi‘magazine was that given to “Midsummer Madtiess” by Arthur James, editor of the Moving Picture World, in its issue of Sept. 11, 1920. The editorial, which is reproduced with this article, was signed person- ally by Mr. James and therefore bears even greater weight than though it had been printed merely as an ex- pression of the magazine itself. His signature adds the prestige of personal |- ; opinion and responsibility to the pow- erful prestige of the magazine itself.. Great moving pictures are few, al- though many. productions may be call: ed excellent. ‘Midsummer Madness, the third important: production creat-}. ed by ‘William ‘DeMille, steps into greatness and’ classifies itself by ab- solute: merit. ag a. superb entertain- ment.” It'has that:fine virtue of being a complete dramatic structure to -be- gin| with. To thia have been real acting; : bedutiful photography, a sense of taste and composition. It is unquestionably the greatest dramatic production the screen has ever seen. Nothing in “Midsummer Madness”. im- poses -on one’s sense ‘credulity, and there’ is no jarring \note of anachron- ism in the gaod: social atmosphere through which action proceeds. ‘Mr. DeMille is a dramatist first, and the result is very evident on the screen, An effort. to ‘tell the story would form no proper part of this comment, as we leave the beauties of the production: for enjoyment by the many who see it. ‘A word to those who are distressed about the falling off in fine produc- | tions for’ the screen—a.critical exam- ination of this exceptionally great work will effect a cure. Mexico To. Celebrate ‘Centenary of Liberty Mexico City, May- 16.—Mexico wilt celebrate ‘the centenary of its Inde- pendence next September and elabor- ate plans are being made for the event. President. Obregon has an- nounced ‘that a special invitation wil! he extended King Alfonso of Spain to ibe present and, although a general | welcome will be“extended. the coun- tries which have recognized Mexico will be accorded special hours. BUY NO DYE BUT “DIAMOND DYES Unless you ask for “Diamond Dyes” you may get a poor dye that streaks, spots, fades and ruins your goods. Every package of Diamond Dyes con- tains-simple directions for home dye- ing or tinting any new, rich, fadeless color into garments or draperies of any material. No mistakes!. No failures! ff Advt. aboug. | “The supnbe't spoke! of,” explained}, Zippy, “Was a’great golden’ one drawn} by eight brown poniés{(in@sometimes | dito r Indorses | curiously, f i . “That was golden, too, -answered Zippy. “It was called ‘the Old Wom- an’s Shoe’ and was. drawn by eight milk-white ponies. (and sometimes someone: else besides), driven by a woman ina gray wig. A dozen child ren got a ride in the top. “But the boot! You spoke of a boot.” : J Zippy nodded. “It was a great gold- en one and was drawn by eight coal- black ponies (and sometimes some- one else). A man dressed like a gray ¢at drove them. Over the top was a sign, ‘Puss-in-Boots’.” ’ = > “He didn't mean’ us-after #ll,” whis- pered'Flippety-Flap to. the twins. JBut Mrs, Ostrich was stil: curious. “Who was the someone’ else?” she wanted to know... | = jm >) ‘ “twas,” “answered Zippy Zebra proudly. © “I, was. the one; who haf a wurn.at all three,” # fio) <aein(To B.« Conthaued). > pyright, 1921, .N, B.A, coe + With vigorous protest, be Consistency. i BY BERTON BRALEY _ BIGAMY WAVE HITS NEW ‘ YORK (Continued from Page 1) in a.palatial home in northern York.“ » é Wife No. 1 brought no legal action and the laws of New York and Con: necticut were inadequate to prosecute him for bigamy. He resigned, however, as vice chan- césiur of wew Jersey, a few days lat- er when Wife No. 2 entered his court and publicly horsewhipped him. oes e. New Then there is Arthur David Stevens, of Brooklyn, the Bronx, and points west. Sadie,“of New York, testified she married him in 1920,. believing fondly he was a bachelor. But Cidily, of Derien;\ stepped forth and testified: that ‘hé had married her in 1911, Stevens is the manager of a chain of rapid-fire restaurants, though. that fact ; was. ‘glven no significance in curt. Both wives protested extreme friendship for him. He was sweet and nice, they agreed, as they left court-<arm’ in arm, refusing to go ahead,with prosecution. oo... —— He stood on a soap-box and ranted, He talked of “oppression and woe,” panted : While waving his arms to and fro; Our rulers, he said, were despotic ’ And bound that freé-speaking should cease (He spoke in this fasbion ‘sevrotic While guarded by: seven police!) He talked about “tyranny” fearful, He said we were bound and enslaved; He waxed both emphatic and tearful ‘And while in‘a frenty he raved * The laws that he fleered and he flouted Protected his frame from the mob added | vAHA St *HERS'S A WOMAN AUTHOR WHO SAYS y You. SAX A WOMAN WROTE THAT 2 — WHAT'S: HER (Or else, it can scarcely be doubted , Someone would have caved in his nob!) And so, with a'verve undiminished He spouted red gospel aloud » —And the cops, when his mouthings’ were finished 4 Escorted him out of the. crowd! .* Sean (Copyright, 1921, by. Newspaper Enterprise Association.) MRS. TRUESS AHA SS OH, (SS, HERS Ir iss MISS EVELYN: DePLUME NAME 3 AULA EV OUMNH MLM LAE RAL SAE 7 MAY 161921 | » Another. «charge, ofyreal bigamy ‘where, three wives fire arcerned cane “following a kiss. ‘Harty A. Newton, {a handsome ‘actor, was put in the | Tombs prison: because:-he kissed hia wife. He did thig'in Grand Central station, where his three wives had gone to meet him! 5 yo And. he was promptly nabbed by de- tectives. Re The loves of Newton, so far as they are recorded by the court, began 10 years ago in Monticello, 111, whére he married Florence Madiera, an actress. | She was at the time playing in:“Falr and Warmer” and “Up in Mabel’s Room" productions of a stock, come Dany. : i For seven years they lived happily, then Harry, attera whirlwind court- ship, won for hig helpmate Glenn Ar- goe, of vaudeville fame. She it was who gave him the betrayal kiss, Not. only is she wife No. 2, but Harry married her twice. They had married in Rochester, Minn., come to New York, and promptly lost the cer- tificate, hence the second wedding as he sailed away to be a soldier. Happiness blessed the match unt!! September, 1919, when Harry passed out of Glenn's life. Two days later in Port Huron, Mich., he married Iva Ed- monson, the youngest of/all, who waa playing ingenue parts in “regular at- tractions.” a ; Recently all three wives met in a theatrical booking’ office. compared notes, sent for Harry, and then placed him in jail. | Manhattan Jack Murray's case is slightly different in that he made no attempt.to conceal from his wives aft- er marriage the facts of his marriages to the others. . Murray's wooings were of the rapid- fire type, as he is himself. In-1914, Murray. was 26.He: was of medium height, sandy-haired, blue-eyed, fluent of speech, MG |rapher, a lavish spender,.a “dressel to kill” and all in‘ all ‘was thought much of. i So, on Feb. 23, 1914, he. bar 3 in a. tete-a-tete in a Broadway theate: box with a girl he had never before seen. Within ‘an hour’ they went to Brooklyn where Assistant City Clerk Maher made them husband and wife. In ‘1917, Murray sued his actress bride‘ for,» :df#pree, but , dropped the case when she counter-suitéed in Los Angeles, ‘charging him with cruelty: The California courts, however, re- | fused her a decree. In 1918, Murray came east again. He entered the Liberty Loan organ- \ ization and. there met pretty and win- some Marie Effv@beth Dougherty, a worker. for. the National Security League. - ‘ is Following their meeting he enlisted in the. Marine Corps, and two-days later, on July 15, both hurried to the Hall.of Records, New York, where the.Rev. D.-H. Loux, made them man and wife. In his marriage license he swore, he had never previously been married... Marie swore.she was 22 and hailed from Philadelphia. They: part- ‘eit immediately after’ the ceremony, fseither giving a reason. * Last December, during a gathering of the Kit Kat Klub in the Waldorf- Astoria, Murray fell ‘in love with a | beautitul girl named Anite May South- with, daughter of a Streator, lll, mer- chant. {She ‘wes ‘appearing fn the “Three Live Ghosts” company under the stage name of Ann Warwick. One, hour after their meeting they were ‘married by ‘the Rev. Dr. Wil- vam Matthews, a.Preabyterian clergy- man,’ and the license was obtained in Brooklyn. In in Murray described himself as a merchant, and never be- fore married. Then he confided, each to the other. that he was a much-married man, and to his last bride he announced he was | “Headin’ West” to seek freedom from Wife No. 1. -But when he arrived in Los Angeles he issued a statement that he and Wife No. 1 had made up. : s ee 5 || Mrs. Yvonne -Pavis Murray, upper jleft, Mrs. Ann Warwick Murray, up- per right, and Mrs. Marie Dougherty | Murray are the wives of the muchly wedding John W. Murray of New York, iCROWD HAS LITLL iPATIENCE FOR REDS | London, May 16.—The temper of the People toward the Communists who are permitted to preach their’ doc- trines here unhindered, was shown by an incident in Trafalgar Squate ee {other day. i bi lag” sate After the strains of the “Red {had “been started at a Communis | meeting, a former officer, wounded 50 ; badly he coula “scarcely stand, ‘stool |p in front. of the crowd numbering | Several thousand, and called for cheers | for the king. % |__ The response to his appeal was ear- | splitting. This So enraged one of the | Women members of the Communist jerowd that she rushed upon the offi- jcer and cuffed him roundly. There- upon he called for three cheers for ithe queen, the Prince of Waies and finally for law and order. This. broke up the meeting. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine | | i | i 1. i ' | { | Take Aspirin only as told in each | package-of genuine Buycr Tablets of | Aspirin. Then you will be following | the directions and dosage worked our by. physicians during 21 years,‘ and | Proved. safe by millions. Take 0 j chances with substitutes. If you sve j the Bayer Cross on. tablets, you can jteke them without fear for Colds, 'Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Enrathe. Toothache, Lumbago and ‘for ; Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve ta- , blets cost few cents. Druggists also jeell larger packages. Aspirin i# the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. He. wag thenia commercial photog- , ie a ta, [2 o ’ w@ Ty { oy < | i | vii } | voce 1 } ry ye « ® iy { | | i | vin