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aa | | entirely .of jurists, psychologists. and ATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1921 THE BISMARCK TRIBUN! POSSIBLE TO BE TOO FRANK Honest” Ct ilo “by : ‘Friends Would Wreck Relations—Almost Every One Has e. Jewels.” It ts’ impossible’ to tell’ the whole trutlt £9 an average human being and stil Femain on terms. of friendship | with him, There is. Jittle friendship | without make-believe. If two men-are | close friends, you may ‘take it that | they have been pretending to a con- | siderably higher estimate of each other i than they, would set down in a perfect | honest lary. i 4 Tt is not’ necessary that they should deliberately lie to another, but they must _ discreetly conceal a’ certain amount of criticism that Is going on all the time behind the bones of their skulls, What ‘fs said in’a spirit of truth ‘ts | set down to malice. Can a tran be your friend if he steals the crown from your head? Can he be your: friend even if he steals a single jewel from your crown—especially the paste Jewel? We have all—the greatest and | the meanest of us—paste jewels in our crowns, Willa true friend point them | out to a world that is already over- much inclined.to scoff? Or will he not rather organize a claque that will} pretend to be dazzled by diamonds? | Man is not only a realist. He is also | a lover of romance. He dreams of | what he would be quite as often as he deplores what he is. He cannot | help. being. attracted by people ‘who ; make his dream appear true, There | are’ some men who are such intense egotists that they can believe in the | truth of their dreams without any | assistance from other people. Southey ! aggeed that his .#Madoc” was “the | best Engiish poem since, ‘Paradise | Lost” There was no need''to tell | him so; he knew it already.—New | Statesman, London. | WAS EXPECTED TO PROTEST, Customary at One Time for Speaker . Of House of Commons to Re- | H sist Appointment. To one respect-a newly appointed | speaker of the British house of com- ; mons may congratulate himself that there has been an abandonment of some of the old customs, for he, is no longer expected to make an elabor- ate pretense of unwillingness to accept | his great office. ; | This pretense was carried to great lengths at one time, and the cere- mony took on some points of likeness to the bridal customs of savage coun- | tries, for the speaker was expected to | make a show even of physical re- | sistarice when led ‘to the chair. { It wag not an original custom of the | house. Far back in history it appears i that speakers protested to the house and to the crown against their elec: | tion only when they really did not | want to’ be appointed. It seems to} have been under the Tudors that a ridiculous subservience was imported, and it was expected of the. speaker, that he?khould “make repeated ex- | cuses and declare himself unworthy of | election.” i It Is Hard to Be Accurate. Can you exactly describe what you see? It you can, you are elevercr | than most persons. A book recently published fh Paris relates that. at a/ meeting of scientific men two of them suddenly began to quarrel. Under pfetense of obtaining legal evidence the president of the meeting asked everyone present to write an exact | report of what had happened. The quarrel was a pure piece of acting ayranged to test the powers of ob- servation of the men’ present. Though the assembly was composed doctors, .only one .report, contained less than 20 per cent of error; 13 re- ports had more than 50 per cent; wrong; and in 34 reports from 10 to 15 per cent of the details were wholly imaginary. When men of science can | go err we can understand how easi y! the ordinary man_can go astray. The | story shows why lawyers value cir: cumstantial evidence so highly.—! Youth's Companion. No Divorce in Great Russia. To the peasants of Great Russia marriagé'is a tle that death alone can sever, aQd divorce by the help of law courts, $83, practically unknown to | them. If the husband and wife can- | not ‘get along together they simply | agree between themselves to live | apart, the husband taking the boys: and the wife the girls, in cases where;! there are any children. In spite of | the fact that there is uo recourse to | the courts, however, husband and wife in Great Russia do not know each oth- er before marriages except in rare in- stances.. The selection is made -by the parents or guardians, and it is un- scemingly for the bridegroom to see thé bride, more than’ once before the nuptials. | Cultivate Distinct Speech. Let us consider clear and distinct | enunciation as contrasted with other | kinds. Talking distinctly is one of the finest of huthan accomplishments. The | Association of the Hard of Hearing, at | a recent meeting, urged the cultiva- tion of lip-reading by those inclined to deafness. Talking with the lips. is as good for those who talk as it is-for | those who listen. The finest and clear- | ext enunciation is by those who enun- | ciate with the Jower lip and thej tonguesinstead of by wagging their | jaws and talking through theit noses. \ ‘Avold masticating your spoken words, | _and that besetting Yankee sin—the’ nasal twang !—Boston Globe. i TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | 'Dr. C. William $ If you need a carpenter to do any.; repairing, phone 195-R. No job is) too small. 8-6-2t | WANTED—Seven or eight room house | by Seg. Ist. Write 265, care Trib-| une. 8-6-1 ' fell on his knees, “O Lord,” he prayed, | “bring me a sack of flour, a side of | Evening Post. | modernization in those dz Above, left: Countessina Emichette Frankenstein of Rome; right, Duchess of Marlborough, form Gladys Deacon; and below, William Leeds, son of Princess Anastasia of Greece, and his fiancee, Princess Xenia. All of these have or will figure in international marriages. TWO MARRIAGES WILL PROP. TOTTERIN IN NEWEST INTERNA RE Prices—Matinee 15 and 25. Night 35 and 50. See A Genuine Kentucky Still on Exhibition in Moonshiner from Kentucky will appear. in Matinee 3 p.m., Night 7&9 .,..,FrontoftheRex, CHAS. PER Former Member of the Hatfield Gang Person Pardoned by President Wilson Z A MAIL ROBBERS EXCEL FICTION More Startling Disclosures Promised Following Ar- rest of Banker ‘Chicago, Aug. 6.—Had “Sherlock jHolmes” stepped out pf fiction, he could not have spun a :adre romantic story than that disclosed here in the arrest of John.W. Worthington, head of a dozen financial enterprises. Worthington is in jail at Wauke- gan, Ill., under $50,000 vond, charged with having, acted as a “fence” in disposing of tronds and other secur- ities stolen from banks and mail cars all over the country. Fecerai oificiais say they will prove ‘that Worthington was the Brains of a gang of bank and mail car robbers operating from coast to coast—a gag having orancies in 36 wf the principal cities of the country, Patrick J, Roche, internal revenue intelligence agent, is the Sherlock Holmes of the story. For four ~ 4 shadowed the comings aft?''goings of Worthington, and painstakingly gathered the evidence that brought the indictment of Worthington, Owen T. Evans, his business associate, and 26 other persons, still unnamed. “The real story, when it comes out, will be a surprise,” says John V. Clinnin assistant federal district at- ROYALTY WITH MORE U. S. DOLLARS BY ALICE ROHE. New York, Aug. 6—More <Amcri-| Br can dollars, will go to bolster the slumping cause of royalty as a resuli of two approaching international mar- riages. During the past 35 years it is esti- mated that fortunes totaling more than’ $150,000,000 have gone to. vari- ous titled foreigners broke and nea broke, through mi ge with the daughters of American millionaires. These are the latest international marriages to be announced: ess the matches where the biggest for- tunes were obtained were by m bers of the nobility of other countr The more than the nobility suelo Vanderbilt to the Duke of M borough was the oc 000,000 pot passing overseas. amount more than $2,500,000 went for the reconstruction of Blenheim Castle in Scotland. William B. Leeds, son of Princess Anastasia of Greece,* who was ‘the widow of William B. Leeds of New York, is to marry Princess Xe niece of King Constantine of Greece and daughter of Grand Duchess Marie. Countessina Emichette lranken- stein, daughter of Count Henri de Frankenstein of Rome, is to wed Don Enrico Barberini Prince of Palestrina. This marriage will pring the grand- HAD TO DO MORE THAN PRAY {daughter of Mr. princely house, for the Barber back in Roman history to the Middle Ages so will the marriage o! Xenia and: Leeds. i - 1, Pridgin Teale in 18 that day dates the stove as we know it torney. £ The Worthington case, federal of- fficials sajy, will clear up least 12 big mail and. bank robWeries, invoiv- ing more than $5,000,000 in loot. These include: were recently, divorced. He married another American girl, Gladys Dea- con. She recently married Lieut. Col. Louis Jacques Balsan. and Mrs. William B- wster of New York into anotaer nis BO Gladys Vanderbilt, cousin of Con- ‘ = = suelo, married Count Lalo Sze-|, Toledo, (0. ‘mail nobery Feb. 17, chenyi, a Hungarian nobleman, She}192!. Loot: — $1,000,000. Mail robbery near Council Bluffs, Ja., ‘Nov. 12, 1920, Loot: 3,500.00. Chicago mail robbery April 6, 1921. had a fortune of $12,000,000 in her own righ Other Weittives ‘that ‘Amétican heir- at least throne against poverty for . another gene gsses took to foreign noblemen: Toots. $350,000 ‘ Sra _ Italy, numerically, has had more of} Miss Anna Gould, married to Count Clovel ae eflese iy) Gideago “and its royalty wedded to American heic-| Boni de‘Cagfellane, $10,000,000. Mails argbbesica’ dat Puliraeans 111 jag! Goelet, married to. the of burghe, $5,000,000. n= iss Paine Astor, now Miss H. H. . | Spender-Clay $10,000,000. Miss Bradley Martin, Craven, $15,000,000. Fortunes totaling $100,000,000 were obtained with Miss Vivian Gould, now Lady Decies; Miss. Amy Phipps, now Hon. Mrs, Frederick Guest; Miss Gam- mel, now Lady Arthur Herbert; Miss Helen Zimmerman, now Duchess of Manchester, and other heiresses. s than any other country. But Mount Vernon, Ill.; St. Charles, Mo., and Sullivan, Ind. DEPRESSION _ ISRETREATING Apple’s Weekly Review of Busi- ness Conditions Shows Up- ward Trend Vanderbilt’ tamily has 1 now Lady 0,000,000 for husbands of The marriage of Con- ion for a $12,- Of this The duke and duchess fas the” largest almond plant and the greatest fruit and vegetable cannery cn the Pacific slope. The pear or- and from months, in true fiction style,’ Roche ROY STEWART in “THE DEVIL DODGER” Big Sensational Six Act Production. FIGURES IN MAIL ROBBERY CASE up for repairs. Rumored: that bably will start, with railroad bu In Many Trades Auto tire industry almost up to mal output. were made for every 100 in same jod last year. States are slump hit bottom in April. . More nage now being shipped than'a months’ ago, though lower prices off. Silk cemand reviving slowly. P: steadier. ¢ Shoes and textile industries continues steadily. ! than domestic sales. ‘ Bituminous coal production tons below normal. . Northwest buying its winter coal. ‘Docks at of Great Lakes’ congested with’ slump in few months. Rubber imports, as big as pre-war. Fertilizer market dull period. year. It believes the world wheat will not exceed the demand. Low prices curtailing crude oil duction. Imports from’ Mexico practically ceased. Outlook is tank stocks will ‘be drawn on month, ‘Patrick J, Roche (aby revenue intelligence agent, who rounded up the evidence on which John W. Worthington (below) wa: indicted on a charge of ‘naving di posed of bonds and securities ob- tained jn bank and mail car rob- heries. ARR RAR eee SLORBY: STUDIO Buccessors te’ |’ to HOLMBOE STUDIO expect a decisive improvement in trade. Retail sales are Increasing in the east, south, mountain and Pac coast regions, reports the Credit Clear- ing House. St. Louis district con-) tinues dull. More Freight ; Number of cars loaded ‘with freight on all railroads in week ‘ended July 16 was 776,252, This was 136,564 cars n the week before. The gain f - Forty eo es Humpty Dumpty. Bread Nearly 350,000 freight cars-are laid Volume of exports from United increasing. The export many into thinking exports are falling that has no market. Hard coal-output big, but insiders are predicting price KODAK FINISHING! Quality Work for the Amateur. ASK Your Grocer Produced..By - BARKER BAKERY. Saturday Oniy” | the railroads are on the eve of a big repair: program, also heavy buying of .equip- ment this fall. Next steel boom pre- ying. Bor- In April, May and June 87. autos’ per- ton-) tew ‘fool Large quantities of Amerigan.godds, rejected in South America on account of exchange rates, are being returned. rices ‘both in fairly good shape and improvement Copper industry every dull. ‘Expotts, mostly to Germany and Japan, larger - con: tinues at yearly rato ‘of © 160,000,000 not . head ~* coal in pounds, twice in mid-summer ‘Wheat movement in northwest much heavier than year ago. Farmers, need- ing cash, are liquidatiing. Wall Street. Journal predicts no wheat surplus this chop pro- have that this vo), internat | TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS OOOO Lone Beaver Found He Had Taken the} "1". shar » Sac a "0° aa ly in merchandise and manu- Words of the Preacher Altogether But peior to ‘Teale’s inventions the | chards iofthe Sacrameto delta pro By Albert Apple feetuued-peoducts 2 ; j e duce the greatest crops in the world, 1 sos anall . lactured products, Too Literally. world was made acquainted by the i a cae a The steel industry will turn the - ae ‘Atorican, Hanilton, in 1874, with a | {he fruit being first to reach (he mar- corner and begin to revive slowly ——————————— eS i ‘ kets each year, The delta district, | within 30 days. ‘As Lone Beaver sat in the mission} SY , other materials in such a manner that they could be burnt without produe- ing masses of suffocating smoke, Ham- ilton’s localities where wood was scarce. It never had much vogue, but presumably was detgts appreciated by the people whom,te had in mind ind patent, house and listened to the words of the preacher, he had an inspiration. Only by hard work had he been able to live. He worked about the Hudson's Bay company’s post in summer and spent the winter in the snow-drifted forest on his trap lines. “ve y I say unto you,” said the preacher in. his sermon, “go to the Lord in prayer for what you want, and if you have faith it will be given you,” Lone Beaver went to his teepee and bacon, one box of tea and one box of sugar.” He waited until late afternoon in vain. It occurred to him that as he had never seen the Lord, he perhaps had asked too much of a strang “Q,Lord,” he prayed again apologeti- cally, “bring me only half of what 1 asked before.” Still nothing happened. Supper time came and Lone Beaver was hungry. “O' Lord,” he cried desperately, ; “bring me a plate of beans.” That seemed little enough” to ask, but nat a bean came in answer, This was too much for Lone Beaver, aud he voiced his lost faith in angry words, “O Lord,” he said, “you are just the same as the Hudson’s Bay company. Hunt, trap, fish or no eat.”—Chicago STOVE FIRST MADE IN 1855 But Dr. Neil Arnott, an Englishman, _ Had the Germ of the Idea in the Year 1821. Stoves are a comparatively recent invention, ‘True, stoves of some sort were used by the ancients and even by the savage tribes which preceda their civilization, but the first reg} modern “improvement in the produe- tion and agency of heat,” as he called it, was made by Dr. Neil Arnott and announced to a marveling England Nov. 4, 1821, the Detroit News states, How, much stoves were in need of s in proven by the fact that when the German, ; mes, in 1850, des- cribed this first “smokeless stoves, not only the scientifie world but all properly conducted households greeted him as a great inventor, The next steps for 1_were made | 4 Sacramento J being wting center for deciduous fruit, and Sn Mae a Ea im ee dad Ee tae Vo seat A ax eit dae a straw and m. of comprcased kf This is the prediction of J. A. Cam bell, president of the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. It’s the first time any big steel manufacturer has set a definite date for improvement. Within the past three weeks the na- tion’s mental attitude toward business has changed. ' Optimism is”springing up everywhere, A psychological boom seems ‘to have started. Depression practically has course, says the National which often is compared with the famed valley of the Nile, also yields thousands of tons of asparagus. each year, as, well us great quantities of other vegetables, while it Is kuown throughout the nation for the lety and quality of its vegetable seeds, Lunds bordering the streams of the valley produce most of the nation’s hops. ‘The eastern edge is prolific in the production of grapes and straw- berries, while the recently developed rice acreage iis placed California sec- ond only to Louisiana as a producer of this” cereal. invention was dedicated to ising his Favored by Nature. the distinction of greatest distrib- ally accurate. the world’s BISMARCK BISMARCK 7 eae College Building BANKING Specializes in commercial education. It makes a specialty of training young men and women for the higher salaried Business and Banking Positions Neca) It is one of the few colleges in the United States which constantly more calls for graddates to fill good positions it can supply. Write for particulars. When you " know what this AE Model Office Training School nes has done for others, you will want to attend, if you aspire to get a good position — a position with a future. College in session throughout the year; students enter at any time. No entrance examinations. Some of our students now satisfactorily filling good positions, started at the Bismarck College with lowest primary branches. Write : G. M. LANGUM, Pres: Bismaftk, N. D, = iti bibewwshe run its Bank of Commerce, whose business’ predictions in the past year have been exception- Dun’s says that it is about time to TAKE NOTICE There is a misunderstanding concerning the ownership of THE CITY CLEANERS AND DYERS. , : f We wish to advise that we have no connection with any clean- ing plant in the city, but have and operate our own new and modern cleaning plant constructed at'a cost of over $8,000.00.’ CITY CLEANERS AND DYERS * Office; Klein’s Tailor Shop Phone, 770 422 Broadway. Dakota-Montana Twelve Oil Syndicate Incorporated under the Laws of North Dakota. . In The Cat Creek Wonder Field Capitalization $150,000. $10. Per Share. Our Representative, Mr. P. S. Young, will be in the ~~” THEATRE Direction Valleau Theaters Company 2 TONIGHT CHAS. RAY in “SCRAP IRON” ~ =: And Comedy.............“WET AND WARMER® Monday and Tuesday Va Be MIRIAM COOPER in..............“THE OATH” COMING suc CONSTANCE TALMADGE in. .“DANGEROUS BUSINESS” ANITA STEWART in :“PLAYTHINGS OF DESTINY? City for several days, and can be seen at Hotel McKenzies’ ee CHAS: RAY in. “THE OLD SWIMMIN* HOLE” ‘ Matinee Daily at 2:38... 2 4 ripen! i meat a eeaenon S