The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 27, 1922, Page 4

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! ] 4a PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBU. THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922 TH E BISMARCK TR IB UN E [close to the localities where the raw materials are | Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, Class Matter. N. D,, as Second |Produced. ST GEORGE D, MANNS - S - Editor j Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO. Marquette Bldg. NEW YORK - - PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ‘land values, DETROIT | Kresge Bldg. | Fifth Ave. Bldg.! Similarly, and MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| or republication of all news dispatches credited vo it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. i All rights of republication of special are also reserved. ‘and into vilages | The second cause of the shift of manufacturing is in land values. gested population, which automatically increases Manufacturing attracts con- Manufacturing and labor are moving to the in- terior of the country. a more important movement, the jtendency is for factories to get out. of the cities or the open country, where land is cheap and rents low for employes. The cvil, however, shadows them, for when they | dispatches hereinjmove their indsutry to virtually worthless land |they automatically make it steadily increase in| MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION« jvalue in proportion to their labors. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE Daily by carrier, per year... Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. IN ADVANCE | $7.20 hardest nuts. to 5.00 |econemics. Bismarck). THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) <i MOVING TOWARD INTERIOR © j g to all, especially: important to men who carry dinner-pails: i Here is something inter The National City Bank of New that the manufacturing industry Rents and high land values probably are the crack in our’ whole system of EDITORIAL REVIEW : 1 York discovers | of the United | 4 noricanism. Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. They are presented here JOKES ACROSS THE SEA Gilbert K. Chesterton believes in America for He says that the efforts of the States, which began along the Atlantic coast, is} Inglish to master the American jokes are and slowly moving toward the interior where fuel and the bulk of manufacturing mater-| ials are produced. ern strip beginning in New England and extend- age joke is provincial. ing from there down into Florida. of the country } { ‘should be fruitless. are on themes which are alien with the Britisher Most of the American jests i : .__, {to begin with, but which may be a part of the Fifty years ago, two-thirds of the nation’s | daily life in the Unitéd'States. In a way humor manufactured articles were produced in the east-|i. international, but the trouble is that the aver- | , Chesterton admits his ‘failure to respond: to many of the American Now that district produces less than half of the | witticisms, but‘at’ the same time he places no |blame upon the Americans, who are blunty dumb country’s manufactured goods. Each year the percentage of manufactured ar- before his own brilliances._ It is a horse apiece. !World humor is rare:—Los Angeles Times. ticles produced in the east grows smaller. Easy question to an- swer. The interior of the United States (the mid. What will this lead to? INTERSTATE MIGRATION A BENEFIT dle west) is destined to be the great manufaetur- We are hardly conscious of the great interstate ing center, as it now is the center of production/migration that takes place every. year in the of raw materials, especially food. around the Great Lakes. Ohio, for instance, turned out $749,000,000 of manufactured goods in 1900. In 1920 this had in- creased nearly six-fold, to $5,100,000,000. Michigan, largely due to its giant auto indus- try, made the greatest advance, its ufactures increasing from $320,000,000 in 1900 to $3,466,000,000 in 1920. Ui ited States, but were it to cease for a time we ee should be sensible of something lost. America is Most of the gain in interior manufacturing has|our common country because the people are free occurred in the Mississippi Valley and the states|to move about in it and they avail themselves of the privilege. Interstate migration accounts for the rapid settlement of the country and for the practically uniform character of the nation’s population. This movement, which has been constant for many output of man-| decades, is responsible for the existence of the American nation. The winning of the West was accomplished by California, reflecting the westward movement, | People from the jumped from. $250,000,000 to nearly $2,Q00,000,- 000 in the same 20-year period. Two things have caused this westward move- Both whave to do with ment of manufacturing. economy. The first is the desire to save expensive freight East, and the movement toward the setting sun is still going on. But coincidental with it is a counter-movement. Ambitious youths from the West head for the older centers of popu- lation to take advantage of conditions or oppor- tunities which seem not to exist where they ,were born. The exchange is of mutual benefit to the hauls by turning raw materials into finished goods| the country as a —__—__.-______-4 ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS o—_———__--. By Olive Barton Roberts The seventh valley qwas Valley of the Cirous,” sae a“ “There isn’t a bit of use in me try- ing to tell you not to stay here,” said the dove who was guiding them.’ “One might just as well tell a fish to stay out of the water.” “Why?” asked Nancy. “Because a circus stays here, when it isn’t traveling around the carth,” answered the dove: “And Twelve Toes and ‘ricky Trixo and Kena Meena Ihave all gone together to work their wicked magic so that you Twins will have to stop. You'll forget all about your journoy to the Kinffgdom oy the Korsknotts. But Flippety-Flop, a little fairy friend of mine, happens to, po here now, and I'l have him speak to you after you have seen the most. interesting things. Perhaps the magic ‘will have worn off:then enough to let You choose; «I'll wait for you on the hawthorne. tree’ across the valley. There is only one more valley after this, you know, until you reach the end of your journey.” Away flow the dove, and at that moment there was the blare of a brass ‘band, * Nick fhad just beén about to say, “Oh, come on, Nancy. ‘We'll fool t dove, and show him that those three old sorcerers can't boss ts any more with their old magic!” when the mu- sic started, Instead he said, in “Oh, look! There ar right ahead of us. Le! | a ite of ‘himself, the big tents go in.” : And Nancy, who also had resolved in her own little heart to do just what Nick had made up his mind to do and go straight ahead through the valley on the Fairy Queen's er- rand, said delightfully, “Oh, yes, come on. We must see this lovely circus! I wonder if they still have Tag Tiger, and Mr. and Mrs, Lion and Kicky Kan- garoo and ‘his mother, and Gyp the Giraffe, and all the others who ran away one time!” By that time they were inside the gate. The man had Ict them in for nothing. ‘Wasn't old Twelve Toes a rascal! It was all his doing, you know, (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1922, Service.) | PEOPLE'S FORUM | Editor Bismarck Tribune Bismarck, ND. Dear Sir: Read the article about the falling star or meteor in your paper of April 22. i ‘Ai short fwhile after I had seen the star or meteor fall rast Friday night of a large cannon, followed by a long rumbling like that of thunder. The meteor fell in a northwestern direc- tion and the sound of the explosion come from that direction. ‘Have been wondering if it. was the explosion of the meteor I heard. Yours truly, ANNETTA DRICKSON. i “Tips On Business | i Germany is offering watches with 20-year guaranty, at 78 cents apiece, f. o, b, Germany, This is typical of competition that may be expected from German manu- facturers, underselling the world on watches, cutlery, field glasses, etc. U.S. Steel now dominates world markets, beating German prices, STEEL HOLDS. Steel industry continues at average. of 72 ‘per cent of capacity, despite) coa] strike, With ample coke supply, production would be greater, Getting’ harder to secure quick deliveries from steel mills. Price of pig iron, is stiffening. Steel) prices are entering a secondary period, of inflation, which may be brief. For first time in more thag three years steel mills in Gary district have a mild Jabor shortage. FOREIGN WAGES, Unskilled JaJor mm Englisi steel mills is working for equivalent of about $13.50 a week, says Arthur Bal- four, Sheffield steel manugacturer, PRICES UP. Wholesale prices are: rising mildly in France and Great Britain, but de- clining in Canada, italy and Japan, INVESTORS, American investors, i tice, have brought $750,000,000, worth of foreign securities. The floating debt, owned by Europe to Am busin firms and individual mated as high as $4,000,000,000 and as low as $1,900,000,000, by internation’ bankers. RAILROADS ORDER. American locomotive company gets orders for 98 locomotives in one day. All around railroads: buying very heavily. Abut 4 ht cars have been ordered so far this year, or twice as many as in all of 1921. So far in April roads have bought an average of 1,300 cars a day. PAPER OUTLUOK. ‘Paper industry finally seems defi- nitely on upward grade, Ameri- ‘can ‘Pulp & Paper Association. Sales of fine papers are three-fourths nor- mal. Wrapping ‘paper sales, reflecting retail trade, are 65 per cent of capac- lity. FEELS LIKE A NEW WOMAN “IT was a sufferer from kidney trouble for several years,” writes Mrs. Arthur Demullo, R. F. D. 1, Grasmere, N. H., “and suffered so much I felt completely lame all over. Since I have been taking Fol Kidney Pills 1 I-heard what sounded like the report am not so lame. My backached all i De a | trembled. different sections, and of immense advantage to} whole.—Flint, Mich., Journal. the time and my eyes, were all a blur. Now I can see fine and feel-like. a dif- ferent woman. ‘Since T have talen two} bottles of Foley Kidney Pills 1 don’t} have that tired fooling. .1 can do my own work now.” They bring quick results. } +, | Learn a Word Every | Day Today’s word is EXCAVATE. It’s. pronounced—eks-ka-vayt, accent on the first syllable. lt means—to hollow out, to form a cavity, to dig It comes, {1 and “cavare’ Companion |. cavatorial. ‘Teg, used, like, this—“Before you build}a house, it is necessary to ex- cavate for a cellar.” — -—% A Thought For Today | + -__—_. ORLY waren] with excavation, ex- iiAnd (Hé" bearing His/otess, went forth) into a place called. the place of |, which is calledinithe Hebrew, Golgotha: where they crucified Him, and two others with: Him, one on either side of Him and Jesus in the midst—John 19:18, i As Christ drew near to death, He It was an experience of His dreation, but He himself had ver fclt it. To His humanity, His flesh, it seemed terrible. Githse: mane bears witness how terrible it seemed. But He passed it for love of! us.—Phillips Brooks. There are 1200 persons in the per- agonal retinue of the ‘pope. Wisconsin farmers own 4044 motor) trucks, (Charles Dickens insisted on having his bed placed north and south. Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These} Ugly Spots, There’s no longer the slightest necd as Othine—double strength—is guar-4 anteed to remove these homely spots. ble strength—from any druggist and worst freckles have begun to disap- pear, while the lighter ones have var.- ished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a ‘beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double Btrength Othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remoye freckles, FRECKLES | Continued from Our Last Issue) “Long ,paus2, Frightful pause. Hours.,,Whole. court holding its breath. Pause like a chunk of eter- nity. ile it as ‘that. Empty as that. What the devil. was he thinking of? Had he forgotten? Was he awake now to the frightful places he kept g-tting into and wondering if this was another and ‘where exactly it lay? Appalling ' pause. Dashed wo- man somewhere ‘in the court goes off into hyster’es and dtagged out. He. didn't hear.a scteam of it, that poor baited chap'-in the box. Just stood thore. Gray as a raked-out fire. Face twitching. “Awfnul.\0T tell you, awful. Nearly ‘went into ‘hysterics myself. ‘Humpo,'slopping his tongue ‘around his jaws; watching) him like a dog watching its: dinner: being cut up. After about two: years, slaps in his tongue and demands. ‘Come, sir, for acid?’ , “Sabre gives his first clear, cal- culated words since he had got up there. I guess he had been’ pulling himself together to look for a trap. ‘He scld very lowly, jfyying each «.|word, like a chap feeling along on thin ice; he said, ‘Effie—asked me— to—get—it—to—clean—my straw- hat—for—me—for—Brighton.” Tid she clean your straw hat for mu? “Nods. “You don’t appear to be wearing it?’ “Shakes. “Pray, where, then, ‘is this straw oxalic’ acid? Is it at your house?’ ‘Shakes. “‘sNot at your house! Odd. Where thon?” 5 “ ‘Look here— “Where then ’” “Took here—’ + “‘Answer the quest‘pn, sir. Where is this straw hat?” “Look hers— Gulps. ‘Look = ere—’ Gulps again. ‘Look here. I lost it in the sea at Brighton.’ “Humpo. draws,’ in his brevth. Stares at. him for two solid minutes without speak'ng. Then says, like one speaking to a ghost, ‘You 'pst it in the sea at Brighton! You lost it in the sca at Brighton!” (Has an in- spiration. Inspired in hell. Turns (like a flash to the coroner. ‘I have fon with the w'tness. sir!’ Sits down. Plump. Court lets go its breath like the four winds round a chimney. Sabre staggers out of the box. “Too much for me, old bawled out. nearly jum’ with the stort. I hawled out. ‘Mr. Cor- oner, I saw the witness at. Beiehton and he told me he'd lost his hat in th> sea’ «puddha,, like a talking idol dis- ‘covering an infidel in his temurle, iho are you. sir?” “Tm a spl'citor, solicitor.’ { “@Pyidha to Sabre: ‘Have you a solie‘tor in the court, Sabre?’ “No! No! Get away! Get out of it! Get away from me!’ “yan have no standing in this, Fal's across into his sat. man, I Ym Mr. Sabre’s of feeling ashamed of your freckles,| court sir.” says Buddha. “awful. Nothing to bo done. “Presently Twyning im the hox. Simply get an ounce of Othine—dou-| Last witness—p t un to serew down ‘the I'd on ‘Sabro’s coffin, ta molish np apply a little of it night and morning | the arement hefore it went to the and you should soon see that even the | iU7v €tood there with the venom ifrothine at the cornors of his mavth, Pol tend thera © man straight ont of the loins ef Jutas Iscariot, stood there ‘making his testimony more damning iby pretending it was being dragged jout of him. Told a positively damn- line story about meeting Sabre at jthe station on his denarturs from |leave a dav after ths girl was sacked. Noticed how strange. his manrip was; noticed he didn't like being ASM Hutch asked about circumstances of her noticed his wife. hadn't Yes, thought it odd. Sabre had explained wife had a cold, but saw Mrs. Sabre in *Tid- borough very next-day. Yes, thought the whole thing funny becaus2 he had frequently: seen Sabre and the girl together during ,Sabre’s leave. ; Yes, notably in the Cloister tea. rooms late one ‘evening. ‘Well, yes, had tfiought what purpose did you buy this oxalic |® hat to clean which ‘you: obtained the | ve dismissal; come to see him off. their behavior odd, s)cretive. such occasions. iously to Sabre about it. Ye said that, old man, a an abominable lie. lie “Eh? Terrific? isn’t the word. ‘Silence. you, madam! Who is that?’ the court like a goddess, like tia, by Jove, like Euphrosyne. no one dare to touch me,’ am ‘Lady Tybar. come in. that you are a li ng Var. EVERETT TRUE “6 son he ever had occasion in the past, in earlier days, to remonstrate with Sa- bre concerning attitude towards girl? Well scarcely liked to say so, hated to say so, but certainly there had b Yes, had ‘spoken se ‘ “There ripped acioss the court ar woman’s voice from the back. -“It’s a lie. And you know it I tell you torrifi How dare Turn out that woman! “Commotion. A woman pressed out from thd mob beliind and. walked. up she said. ‘I Everyone knows me Just heard. All pf you She pointeé ', an experienced and And she went with 4 A | that to old Sabre and stooped over mim and touchd him with ‘both her hands and said, ‘Marko, Marko.’ “Matter of fact Sabre was the first one to speak. He tarew up his arm trom where he'd been covering his face, just as he'd thrown it up when I called cut, and swung her hands asi@> and’ called out, “Don’t touch mr Let me alone. Leave he alone.’ “Ske metjpned to the man beside him, and the chap got up es if her mouon nau been Circe’s and disap- peared. And she took his place and sat down beside Sabre and poor old Sabre crouched away from, hor as if he was stung, ‘and jold ‘Buddha, reaching out for his dignity, said, ‘You may remain ther2, madam, if you do not interrupt the court.’ “There, wasn’t much more to inter- cupt.. Twyning had had about as he was out to do, anyway.. The case finished. The coron2r had a/go at the jury. They went on. . I suprpse they were . gone, ten... minutes. Shuffled in again” Gave their ver- dict: _I was watching Sabre. He took down his hands from his face and stared with! all the world’s agony in his face, straining himself forward to hear. Verdict. They found suicide while temporarily insane and added their most severe censure of the con- duct of the witness Sabre. Hi: jumped up and flung out his hands. ‘Look here— Yook here—Censure! Censure! Cen—!’ “Dropped back on nfs soat I'k> he was shot. Twisted himself up. Sat rocking. “Court cleared in less than no time. ‘Me left in my corner. This Lady Tybar. Sabre, twisted up. Bobby or two. I began to come forward. Sabre looks up. ‘Looks round. Gets his hat. Collacts his old stick. Starts to. hobble out. “This Lady Tybar gets in front of him, me alongside of her by then. ‘Marko, Marko.’ (That was what she me alone. -Get right away from me.’ Hobbles away down the room. “We followed him. “Followed him. the pair of us, up to'the main road. She tried again. I tried. He swung round and faced BY CONDO —- And HOUD I(T CPEN Tite L Get THROVG PHONING bY} You ONION DRUNKARD, You th! i much as he wanted; he'd done what|. us. ‘Let me alone. Won't anyono Yt ‘me ‘alone? Get right away from me, ‘Look here—Look here. If you want ito Co fanytl(ing for me, get right away from me and leave me alone. Do you .hear? Leave me alone.’ i “Hobblicd away out- towards Penny (Green, bobbing along on his stick fast as he could go. “She said to'me, “Oh, Oh—’ and began to cry. Clear we were only ‘driving him mad by following him now. There was a cab came prowl- ing by. I gave the chap a pound ‘note and told him{ to follow Sabre— ‘Gxt up just -alongside and keep ‘there,’ I said. ‘He'll likely get in. Get him in and take him up to Craw- shaws, Penny! Green, and come back to me at the Royal Hitel and there’s ancther quid for you.’ “Old man, I wimt along. to the Royal with this Lady Tybar. Told her who I was and what I knew. Ordered some ‘tea there (which we didn’t touch) and she began to talk to me. Talki tome... “She talked about herself and Sa- bre. What did she say? Np, you'll haviy to let that go, old man. It was more what I read into what she said. I'll keep it—for a bit, anyway. “There's else to tell than that. That cabman I’d got hold of sent in awhile after to see me. Said he'd pickd up Sabre a mile along and taken him home. Stopped a bit to Patch up some harness or something and ‘All, of a heap’ (as he expressed it) Sabre had come flying out of the house again into the cab and told him to drive lik> hell and all to the office —to Fortune, Bast and Sabre’s. Said Sabre behaved all the way like as if he was mad—shouting to him to hurry and carrying on inside the cab so the old man was terrified. “I said, ‘To the office! What the dovil now?” I ran to Lady Tybar and we hurried round. We _ were scared for him, I tell you. And we'd reason to be—when we got there and found him.” ‘ ‘CHAPTER. VIL I When that cab which ‘Hapgood had dispatched aiter Sabre from the cor- oner’s court overtook its quest, tho driver began, in a fat and comfort- able voice, a beguiling monologue of “Keb, sir? Keb, sir Keb? Keb? Keb, sir ” 5 i Sabre at first gava no attention. About a mile along his disabled knee, and all his much iover-wrought body ‘refused longer to be the flogged slave of his tumultuous mind. He got in. Sabre stumbled into his house and Pushed th> door behind him with a resolution expressive of his desire to ‘shut away from himself all creatures lof the world and be alone—be left entirely aione. By habit b> climbed the stairs to his room. He collapsed into a chair. (Continued in Our. Next Issue) Sometimes we think it is better to be abl4 to run like Paddock than to fight like Dempsey. If they have no coal strikes in the next world it will be heaven. ‘Be friendly with the people you know. If it wasn't for them you {Would ‘b> a total stranger. Wonder what a baldheaded man thinks about while shaving? “There will be no unemployment by fall,” says a banker. This is great ‘news fori the college seniors. | ‘Pretty soon the farmers will be \planning picnics to.make it rain, Among those too busy for a vaca- calldd him.) He sort of pushes at |tion, bootleggers lead the list. her'and at me: ‘Let me alone. Let; The objection to throwing cold wa- ter is, it dampens th> enthusiasm. — This ghost seen by a. prominent race-horse man was probably nothing but the ghost of a chance. Our government plans to live be- iyond our means again next year. ; All this silenc> coming from Pata- gonia indicates they have found the plesfosaurus. * ‘When a man drops dead in Phila- delphia they don’t blame him a bit. A bachelor’s main troubles are that he has no wifa to blame for thom. The uyper class isn’t so uppish when jit gets on its uppers. Fine thing about.a 16-year-old flap- |per is she will out grow it 20 years from now when she is 25. {n the annual race botween weeds jand vegetables the weeds are lead- ing by a few inches. fe says a man can marry on $100 per month. He can if she dozsn’t know about it. Perhaps the St. Louis man named his baby Radio because you can hear it so far away. Every rat costs this country $1.82 {per year;. but isn’t worth it. \ : A wife's affections are never stol2n when kept where they belong. “Sterm Sweeps headline. Atlantic City’— But thore isn’t much to | blow about on a bathing beach. Now that they make love by radio {here’s some fast sparking. Sometimes it looks like the only woy they will pars the soldier bonus bill is to pass it up. ROUP Spasmodic Croup is frequently relieved by one application of— yieKs VAPORUB Over 17 Million Jors Used Yearly

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