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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE.” FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1922 PAGE FOUR.. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE smouler and are ready to break forth with but a Entired at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. Ds as Second|/!tle fuel. Class Matter. |. “Let no man mistake the fact that Judge Lau- Editor | der would make an able senator. In ability he would rank above the average in Washington and hi fighting spirit and grim doggedness, there isn’t Kresge TT eg. his marrow’ in the state. Nor is his candidacy— ITH if he announces himself—to be taken lightly as a Fifth Ave. Bldg. whim, or as the mere recrudescence of the old |feud with sole purpose of injuring an old enemy. “I¢ Judge Lauder becomes a candidate he will GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. - PAYNE, BURNS AND SM NEW YORK - - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| or republication of all news dispatches credited vo it or, ar Y ao * not otherwise credited in this paper and also the Tocal (enter into the campaign with all the power and news published herein. _ {dynamic force of which he is capable. We will All rights of republication of special dispatches herein! now what he stands for—and why. He is the and his tongue is guided by a most are also reserved. 1 — on ideal advocate MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATI facile brain. He will be a real candidate—a free oq | anice—and there will be few who will care to face SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE pay Bs Sail, ter year Gi 3B ck). nae 130 |him in argument. Without an organization, he is Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck). 5.00/dangerous. With one of any extent—he could Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota 5 hardly be stopped. | “With Lauder in the race—the fur will fly, but lexcept for the frolic of a fight, there is nothing in it for him. The farmers have picked their candi- date, and Lynn J. Frazier’s nomination has been assured for some time—and the more candidates there are, the more it is assured.” 4 (Established 1873) AIO THE PASSING OF SENATOR GRONNA In the story of the life of A. J. Gronna the man who is discouraged with the adversities of ciep failures or business depression may ‘find new| courage. For it was by perseverance and courage | : : i in himself and his business that led to the con- Democrats will seek to read into the victory of siderable fortune which former Senator Gronna A. J. Beveridge a repudiation of President Hard- amassed. He operated a general store. There |ing’s administration, but such is a strained inter- were hard times...Many. settlers left the state, |Pretation of the Indiana election returns. Bread was shipped in. Mr. Gronna’s customers| The fight in Indiana was Jar, ely factional be- could not pay. He had loaned them money as tween the two contending Republican candidates. There is no evidence that ‘the national adthinis- well as credit. He found himself with many sec- : tions of land on his hands. He was “land pooz.” tration interfered in the Republican contest and But instead of joining the exodus from his sec-jupon the announcement, that Beveridge was the tion of the state, he remained through the depres-|Republican nominee,. the Republican senatorial sing time and a revival of business increased the committee through’ its chairman, Senator Mc- value of his land and brought him wealth. \Cormick, issued the following statement: In politics Mr. Gronna was known as a fighter. | “Albert J. Beveridge has served'12, years in the While The Tribune has disagreed violently. with |senate of the United States with great distinction many of his theories and his alignments, it recog-jand will return to resume that service.” nized in him a will to do battle at all times, a firm! The committee also added that it would “sup- advocacy of his view of problems of governmental port energetically the nominee of the party se- and economic affairs, a willingness to champion |Jected in the Indiana primary.” ( his cause in the face of adverse criticism. These} whoever wins the Republican senatorial nom- qualities made him many friends’ and doubtless ination in North Dakota will be supported by this served him well during his long career in public me committee regardless of the factional strife life. within the state. i, LAUDER’S GRIEVANCE ; The defeat of Senator McCumber faced as he i i z i is by a field of candidates would probably be con- No a Denier qualified than John Andrews, | teued by Democrats of the nation as a ‘repudia- editor of the Courier-News and former assistant). of prosident Harding, but the winner whether} secretary of state under Thomas Hall, to tell the ne be Norton, Frazier, McCumber or Lauder, will grievance that might impel W. Ss. Lauder to enter be supported by the Republican National coment Hebei. mene acorns z Weer ne tee whether it sets well with the plan devised by drews upon Judge Lauder reprints the editorial some.of the I, V. A. managers who are out to get ‘because from a historical standpoint there can be Lainie ee of Senator Mc no better. authority upon Wahpeton feuds than Cs ber i Republi mtd 1 at " re \ this same John Andrews, the cariny Scot, who} PIER AN 2 RePUD CaN DEM ALY COW nOy UG nestled so long in the secretary of state’s office| when the political skies were clearer than they are today. The editorial follows: “The rumor that Hon. W. 8. Lauder, of Wahpe- ton, is considering the possibility of becoming a; candidate for nomination on the Republican ballot! as U. S. Senator, will recall to memory one of the| most spectacular political vendettas that the state) has ever known. : “Mr. Lauder and Mr. McCumber were residents, of Richland county, each ambitious, able lawyers and Scotch. The beginning of the feud that lasted! nearly twenty years, seems lost to view, but may be said to rest principally upon the incompatibil-| ity of the two men. There was not room in Rich-| land for two such. “Mr. Lauder for many years was judge of the district court of the old Fourth district. This did not prevent him being leader of the faction in op- i 5 position to McCumber and his political machine, Judge W. S. Lauder, of” ton, is threaten- any more than McCumber’s unexpected election ing to become a candidaté fot’ United States sen- to the United States senate — after he had‘ been/|ator. Mr. Lauder cores from:the same county as roundly beaten the November previous in his can-|Senator McCumber ardithis would mean defeat didacy for ‘the state’ attorneyship of Richland/of the senior senator in-his own county if such a county — prevented the senator front being’ the thing could happen:Justeawhat special claim head of his political faction. Judge Lauder has to run for the office we do not “Those were the days of real sport and the war-|Know but he has that right and if he:decides to fare spread until ‘it embraced the area of the/S° in he will make the fifth candidate to enter judicial district, clan arrayed against clan, and|the race. We are commencing to think that Lynn each headed by its Scottish chief. J. Frazier was born under a lucky star—even if “It is said that there was even a Lauder aisle he was recalled last fall.—Valley City Times. and a McCumber aisle in some of the churches — but this may be apocryphal. “However, with the accession to the senator- ship of McCumber, the Lauder forces seemed to! es i ebb, But the Judge developed a resourcefulnes: sychology. that, Women have; emerged trom oer and’a political astuteness that frustrated all ef-| ertdom ald: are now, victors; merely. demanding forts of the larger and more powerful MeCumber |“"° night, tobe set. alone; eto develop, to demon: | ; A 2 ;strate and to expand, comes in a news item from machitte to dislodge him for many years. Even ie z stan ° ‘Beston an alarming proof of this demand for ex- when the open warfare end $ . 5 ‘ Pen led, and he was at last! Woman’s invasion of man’s sphere has defeated for the judgeship, he retired from thee i ind him many a gaping wound upon the body \,1,;.. a : s ins of the enemy, not the least of which was his libel their entry into a sport hitherto almost exclusive- z i ‘ \ly their own—marbles. On the sidewalks of th yslander s a S , ‘ ’ 5 sidewalks of the which Oe ens ge data y avai |suburb, since signs of spring appeared, passers-by, © exacted punlulve forced to detour’ to the curbing, have found girls ss ae j me almost as numerous as boys in the game. The Thereupon the feud died down. McCumber lost! sisters play for keeps, too, and often with g kill | his interest in local conditions, engrossed in new |that has sent the brotherd: home eras a interests at Washington and Lauder found him-| ‘The boys of Greater Boston are taking agtandi| self better rewarded as a lawyer of ability than |says the correspondent, but does not add in what! asa judge on the bench. |way the confilct is waged, and whether or not the. “It might be supposed that the old animosities girls resort to strictly feminine methods of com-' had died down and that the fires of hatred had bat. Neither does he tell us of the outcome | been quenched. But it would seem from the hint Merely taking a stand in a community in which the’ of the possibility of Lauder entering the race for feminine element outnumbers the male sounds | U.S. Senator at a time when McCumber is hard ;much like a forlorn hope, with defeat not far dis-| pressed and facing defeat, that the fires still |tant—Indianapolis Star. | ! | i SENATOR NEW’S DEFEAT istration, any more than Senator New’s defeat can be. so construed. Politicians like to draw morals from election returns but their decisions do not fool the rank and file of Rapu votes. | Senator Beveridge at Washington, will bc as administration as Senator New is. Democratic chieftains and the press of that party will of course make the most of Senator New’s defeat for 'that is politics and the way of politicians. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may” not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of importart issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. Q SEES LUCKY STAR FOR FRAZIER GIRLS WINNING AT MARBLES, TOO On the heels of the announcement by a wealthy Chicago woman, who is lecturing on sociological ‘construed as a repudiation of the Harding admin- strong and earnest~a supporter of tio ilarding jman appeared in “Trene,” Musical Comedy Months In New Yo: Which Ran For rk, Coming To Bismarck Some of the pretty girls with the smart musical comedy “Irene.” The charming qualities possessed by “Irene” the musical comedy by James Montgomery which has set the pace for all others to follow the past two years at the Vanderbilt Theater, New York, are its clean, fine and hilarious comedy and the rattling good music arranged for it by Harry Tier- Ney. Heading the cast of the New York Company which the Vanderbilt Producirfg Company presents here at the Auditorium, Wednesday, May 14, for an engagement of one night, is Patti Harrold, daughter of Orville Harrold the grand opera singer. The part of Irene O’Dare, the vivacious eee (Florence Sweet little Violet, de Bluebirds a Winter TO A VIOLET little shopgirl who, Cinderella-like, be- comes a Long Istand society favorite, after, a sttange “and amusing adven- ture, calls fora singing voice of love- ly quality, an ability to act, and danc-} ing of no mean quality. Others in the cast are: Erica Mackay, Booth How-, ard, Howard Freeman, Jane Iearnley, Henry ise Worthington, Ur-| sula O'Ha¥ Gs ins5s ou Ripley, He i. end Teddy? tumes by Lucille, and a special ‘tra are provided for “Irene” whose ap- peal is so general that it is now. pla: ing on four continents. ' Borner.) ep in ycur mossy bed, re calling, so lift up your sleepy head; gone with his frost and snow; Wake, little Violct, 'tis time now to grow. Dear little Vielet, try not to be so shy, Lift up your eyes to the bright, sunny sky; Bluebirds are Wake, little Violec tox Spr inging, and robins are, too, ing’s calling you. Dear little Viclet, I love no flower but you, Like a shy maiden yea hide_y: i live Meel ky unassuming, yo. Neévet a’ thot’ for the worl _ Dear little Violet, a lesson if 1 'seek e’er fer f But, if to the’ wiwld-the b Tt 8951 while Live, sweet Fic cgings #0 gill. wh kling live today, fame, tha cur eyes iat blue; ugh your life, are ‘and strife, d you,have taught; at fame is dearly bought; est in me I give, lose who etijoy, my work may seek mewhere I live. e , st 4 aver, I shall remember, toil, fame is ah ember, dead on the morrow, a Up its way heartbreak and sorrow. ADVENTURE: OF THE TWINS _ | Again every better to héar the words of Longh the Wiseman. There’ wa sound, then Longhead's vi out. These were his words: “The true king of both the Dd evvers, and the Korsknoits is the fu rious falecn. He is a bravo king, be-| witched by a Sarcerer a thou id years ago, and turned into the you now. sce. His son was tupned i a dove, The reason for it all was tl the young pri was in lov Princess. Therma, and the Sorcerer’ wanted hey for him spell can only ‘be broken by a man who will shoot the Gove heart. Then both the’ falt dove will return to their truc form! and all will be well.” © “Hear! Hear!” wonder. “The word foy Longhead never Suddenly the nm flew down from the top of the tree on which he ha ' peen sitting. “Give mo your pow,” he; said boldly to King Indig. ee i King Indig handed it over with a word. And for an arrow the falcon plu ed out ore. of his own barbel f ers, the one that had guided WN: and Nick on their travels. He hell pow-string in his beak ore te eo he guided with one long-talone Y eWwhang! Away — sped: ) the arrow to the dove’s heart. Instantly the dove; yanished and a fine looking yout: his place, He waved at the people and ningess [Therma’s must bet t ies.” out | \ ic ! | his hand cheerily then sprang to Pi we the same nt the falcon changed into his true form of @ war- rior king, before whom all the Dedd- yevvers and Korsknotts owed in awe: Ugly King Indig and awful King Ver- do ‘bowed th neads too! “Nancy and Nick, come her mansed King Courageous, whic the true king’s name. “I want to you for all you have done.’ (To Be Continued) ‘ * (Copyright, 1922 “IZA Service) Is ON AS VILLA ACK” MEXICO EDGE “COMES B , B- NEA Service El Paso, Tex., uM nouncement that Francisco Villa tends to run for governorship of the state of Durango comes on the eleventh anniversary of his capture of Juarez, when he was a Maerista general. © ag In a little more than 11 years Vilia has been a hunted outlaw general af a revolitionary army, dictator of exico, border raider and rancher. This governorship is the first poli- tical office he ever has sought. al- though he could have been ‘president of Mexico“had’ he go chosen. May 5.—The an- jn- | ite RS eee even if on a tract of meito Villa after ’ Farm li tug spent 1 years in the saddle h the troops most of tho: time:. ough he entered. into solemn t with President. Obregon to n return for which Villa th gdom, riches ane . it remaing to be seen whethei former dictator will regard the ong the stipulations Villa agreed od was one binding himself to keop Won't Be. Bound doesn’t like to be,'bourd to ing. His breaking away from nt, his violation of his com his defiance of the Obregén admit; ion, coming at the very time when States was about’ to ex- ihion to Mexico, is fraughh vith grave possibilities. |. Villa may be induced to withdraw candidacy; he may stay in “the e and be defeated, Kut Mexican of- s are nervous, for’ whether, elect- A |RONK! Honk!) , Hontc! HONK?--. €B ae Nila, ist fifty, young enough vo still ed or defeated’ tor ‘office, they fear it; {wvill start Villa on another rampage. If defeated, he ‘will not take it Kindly. He could do many things in resentment. If elected he may want to super- sede federal powers, For Villa is not content with being an underling, So there you are—the same Villa, same old menace. Reports, from Durango are to, ithe effect that Villa’s: announcement ‘has jcaused a‘furor. There is strong sup- ‘port for Villa and strong’ opposition, |too, and Mexico is not accustomed to jsettling its big issues by ballot. The {state of Coahuila, a neighbor, to Du- ‘rango, is. also disturbed and the fire, if not quenched, may spread,- for |Mexico hasn't had time yet to drop jthe insurrecto habit, ¥ Has Bodyguard of 200 | Villa has a bodyguard of 200 men, jall former soldiers, faithful and good old on his big ranch. ‘Raising crops and stock and marketing them .may be /profitable ‘but they are Not in Villa’s lune, lie 13 not a farmer or ranchman ‘and subordinates supervise all the iwork. The ranch, its many tractors and other farm machinery were toys \for a while, but the former dictator {hap grown tired, of playing with them jand longs fora new game—and it imay be the old game, a game which ‘kept Mexico embroiled and which all i but took in the United States. | What Obregon will do is not known. Probably he doesn’t know what to do. iIf he onders Villa to stick to his itrea ity this might make an.avowed enemy ,of him, If he sends a federal army to jcompel him to abide by his pledges, this means war. } A--pretext would be all that Villa ‘would: need. Temporizing with the }Durango rancher algo is dangerous. It all depends upon the ambitions of the former general. i mbitious. a | TODAYS WORD | Today’s word is LITTORAL. It’s :pronounced—lit-o-ral, with ac: cent on’ the first ‘syllable. It means—of or pertaining to a Sore, especially of the sea; a coast- 1 region. it comes. from—Latin “littoralis,” | used like this—‘“In connection {with the future of the former domin- ions of the czar Japan is especially interegied in the Asfatic littoral.” ! j | A THOUGHT ee | We will rejoice. in ‘Thy salvation, and in the name of our God we will {set’ up our banners: tke Lord fulfill all’ thy petitions.—Psalm 20:5, scanned for-get-me-nots smile sweet- Y, Ring, bluebills, ring! Winning eye and Sing, robin, sing— All among tire reeds.and rushes, Wheie the brook its music hushes, Dright the folopozon biughes— Lhugh, O/murmuring Spring! [ AT THE THEATERS CAPITOL « because a gir] prefers silk to cotton, you call her wayward,” indig- | nantly says Anna (Hedder to -hor stern father in a powerful dramatic sceno Why Girls Leave Homo,” ‘the stir- ig heart interest photoplay which oi theater. next week and t séeatence is revealed but one reason, and there are many others, why many daughters have left their family roofs and struck out for. themselves, The unusua] photodrama reveals with the clearness of a searchlight not. only the reasons “Why Girls Leave Home” but it also pointe in a direct manner to a solution of the problem which many girls and their parents are called upcn to face at some time jor another, ompletely, \X-rayed eggs are -the jatert) wrin- Kig introduced by one of the. lairgest grovery) erganizations in Now York: ae {ehots. He has many other employes! t WHOLE SYSTEM OUT OF ORDER, SAYS R. R. MAN Yardmaster Tells Of Wonderful Change Since He Took Tanlac And Says He Is Happy As A Little Boy Over It. J "J just feel happy as a little boy over the way Tanlac. has:rid me of my troubles,” said A. Ellen, 139° W, Win- ifred St., St. Paul, Minn., yardmaster for tho C. & M. railroad. “My: whole system was in mighty Poor shape for. fully a year, and I couldn't cat a thing without the sharp- est sort ‘of cramping pains. I bloated with gas something awful, and there were some foods I dared not touch at all, (My kidneys bothered me too, sq it was hard for me to stoop over then straighten up. I was so run down J was tired all the time, “I began to feel better almost as soon as I began taking Tanlac, and I now coukin’t ask to be in better health. I can hardly say how thank- ful I am for Tanlac.” Tanlac is sold by atl good druggists. Nothing spoils an old suit as auch as getting a new one does. ‘Many a highbrow’s mustache looks like a low brow. spending it all. Doyle says people are straight in the next world. What else could one expect on the spirit level? May flowers bring June weddings. Only European crowns ‘worth ‘any- thing are the ones dentists put in. Girl claims she can ‘see with her nose. That’s where the others shine. The burglar motto seems to he “Where there’s a till there’s a way.” _ Women want, the Jast word—espe- ciglly the last word in clothes, _A man is steering an auto by ra- dio; but success will come when you can fix am auto bv radio. The latest Chinese puzzleis “What are they fighting for?” ‘They don’t need broadcasting at Genoa. The concert of nations is all up in the air anyway. Divorce comes when there are two people with, but a single thought. Mexico City. has daylight. saving. What do they. want with any extra daylight in Mexico. i DNS When the gets out his chewing to- bacco, the honeymoon is over. the If this coal strike continues, nesd man with money ito burn will it next winter. “A’ husband should be helpful around the house” says a writer. Yes, no home fs complete without one. Wish a daughter in high schoo! there isn’t much parents don’t learn. In Nebraska, a fully preserved historic tooth has been found. ‘Some tooth paste firm will be adver- tising he used their product. Electricity travels’ 11,600,000 miles a minute, You would never guess :t ran the street cars. Some men .tell their wives every- thing that happens and some tell thea even more than that. Ford’s ambition was to make a 30-cent watch; but.he found it would run, so he called it a car, — 1 | PEOPLE'S FORUM j —+ WHY, 3) WANT To SEC MoU, EVERETT. Now---: d ANY TIME YOU WANT S@UAT OUT HERE AN INSTEAD | OF RINGING THe DOOR BELL, AND IF TIM AT HOME YOU'CO AULNWALTS SEE a UF ok To SGE MG, JUST D PUNCH THAT ‘HORN —— 6 DON’T SLEEP ON THE JOB Shawnee, Okla., May 2, 1922. ‘Editor Tribune, Bismarck, N. 'D. Don’t wait for business to pick up. Go pi¢k it\up with the right kind of auyertising. Tbe man who always loses is the man who is always going to do something tomorrow. The man who puts the most into life is the man who gets the most, out of it. Mc-:chants who continue to ignore the benefits of Newspaper Advertis- ing are just buying oil to grease their way to ruin. The man who succeeds is no great wonder. He is only the man wha went ahead and DID THINGS while the rast sat around and said it could not be done. If business is worth having, it is worth going after. What are YOU geing to do, “sit steady” in the boat while your neighboring city: gets the business? WORK together, BUILD together, ‘BCOST together and when you are Teady to leave this world.for the next one, you will go feeling that the place where you had lived was a little bit better becaus> of your having lived there. Yours very truly, SHAWNEE OKLAHOMA BOARD OF COMMERCE, E. R. ‘Waite, Secretary. Of the yearly to‘al df 500000 tons of flax produced for manufacturing purposes. Russia in prewar days Taised 400,000 tons. Easter lily was introduced from Japan about 50 years ago. Russia wants to abolish capital by » ' ) ur v i - t ' ie OS ¥. 1 | | } |