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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ny ween 7 = TH E BISMARCK TRIBUNE EDITORIAL REVIEW | Canning, Seems To Be The Favorite Pastime In Europe Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. Comments reproduced in this column may or may the opinion of The Tribu ‘GEORGE D. MANN | | : | Fifth Ave. Bldg. - - - - - Editor | are presented here ir order our readers may have both sldee : ce eo reas || fein itincuvsed in the’ peeee of . 3 Ni |] the day. i Bence oi - - - - =f “DETROIT [ae a yale ‘arquette Bldg. \Kresge Bldg. WHY ARE a uARS AND ne oe, aoe acai |" FECTLY CAPABLE KANSAS | NEWYORK \-__- s TEACHERS? “A sapling pine that blows on) and MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i omen oe ims SEs we {the edge of a Kansas bluff | + ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or wars with the wind when the! weather is rough,’ has nothing} #epublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- | r 4 4 Z Fs * atever M Elizabeth Woos- | wise credited in this paper and also the local news published Whatever on te radi iter, superintendent of public edu-! } herein. : ; cation of Kansas, who ‘has de-| "All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are | clared war against our uady | also reserved. juines : The lady thus lays down aj | hy q COLLARS | * American collar manufacturers are finding a big market jn the jungles of Africa. The natives, it seems, are as, fond : “of white starched.collats as they are of silk hats. The. taller the collar, the more ivory they’ll trade for it. | © ~ Submission to an,uncomfortable fashion is a reflection of a strain of barbarism, ‘whether in Africa oy here at home. That our women are insisting on comfortable garments is proof positive that they are progressing mentally. = WEALTH _'The national debt now is about $210 for every man, wo-' man and child in America. \ F However, it is nearly twice as big as all the money invested MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION to teachers, instructors or super-} Bismarck ++ 7.20) cates will ,be ed to tobacco| Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00) pe ative heads, instructors or | credited list. HARDING ‘a long-suffering American pub birthday. | spirit of Carrie Nation. The millions who will silently congratulate him on his | think of to drive away from) eduts I sound ‘heretical in this age of Te- ing the target of national problems. Politics is a profession | fort to ostra folks. who smoke ly ridic . Wh t’make the é ACCIDENT jly ridiculous hy not’make folks with cauliflower ears or hair- panies. Why, too, make liars and prevari- a A 4 folk, Reason: Recognizing their danger, they were cautious. —Birmingham News. hazard. } . A reporter for the Courier has Next to women and money, men are most interested in dances, intermittent studies and ‘Against the Prohibition Amendment, that of the 86 con-| schools and college, to the Univer- didates will be able to dodge many really important issues./be supported elsewhere, has a “shows that at least one-third—and |work outside their school activi- conversatism, for Dean Park of the ing their way through college cigar stores to working in the post- electric power and lighting isystems combined. young women are working their is e Cee ny 9 i Economy,” instead of “wet or dry?” should be the slogan | gohoo] are paying all their expen- 4 determined to get education that * Tsadora Duncan says she and her husband, Serge Yes- —isn’t it about:time for those who “dancing girl and he was a soldier. I recognized him when Ito the dogs, to open thelr minds to “The. theory of reincarnation is one df the avenues through | WOMEN CANDIDATES Hereafter mo recommendations | ‘for school positions will be made} SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ie otee ; tar ; ily ii hee is . $7.20 | intendents who use tobacco in any ate 4 Pull bebveae Ge $7.20 jform. No state or institute certifi-| ahs , a . it ne ai >: | Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00) users, ‘Schools and colleges that) the use of tobacco by ad- 1min THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | pupils cannot remains on the ac: (Established 1873) Thus Dame Wooster |have dug up the old hatchet wh President Harding was born in 1865. Nov. 2 is his 57th had deemed buried with the ‘body {that once contained the fighting} He is carrying a heavy load. And, like all presidents, |" ‘This mandate seems to be the| most of his troubles are inherited. | most effective way the News can \, i 5 * tionah work a whole lot of capable birthday may wonder if, sometimes, Warren G. doesn’t wish |tonchers, And while that may he were back in Marion running a newspaper instead of be- formers and self-elected uplifters of swiftly passing glory and little thanks. |to their errant neighbors, this ef- | just because they smoke is perfect- 8 requisites stricter still? Why not Fourteen million pounds of dynamite and powder were | bar liars and scandalmongers, or ai 1 ~: tae yi, “oM-= exploded last year in rock quarries worked by cement com lips or-todclowat, Wie rekon the A a |smokers? And not a single serious injury reported to any of the} : x sand nt ; an W gives. } cato of many perfectly ‘hones! men who handled the explosives. Se eee teed tenet ing school and smoking, albeit on Danger doesn’t matter much. What counts, is careful- | the quiet, in Kansas just the same? | ness. Nine-tenths of acvidents are due to carelessness, not oe ie | ‘ STUDENTS WHO EARN THEIR : ) , EDUCATION been investigating the tradition, as he terms it, that “the college: youth the political move to resurrect John Barleycorn, judging by conversation. - frequent flunks. And he finds, af- ter surveying the, students “who i i andi i 9 dr. eaten gundidates in New York state 62 are wet, Y2| etry ot Datfalo te hormal £0, Gaui: 5 on the fence. sius, to St. Joseph’s institute,” that mighty poor foundation at present in Buffalo. possibly one-half of the students in Buffalo’s institutions—are partially ties.” If the estimate errs it would seem University of Buffalo ig quoted as saying that “at least seventy-five either in part or completely”; that they are doing “almost everything | office after hours and tending fur- naces.”” The national debt ix more than six times as much as all he money invested in the iron and steel works, rolling mills|way through ' these preparatory | years. For example, two or three to determine who goes to Congress. scs “by taking practically entire pee charge of private households.” young men and young women are Zsenin, loved each other in a previous existence 12,000 years | Working for it—and stories similar ago. : wees gy | what is going on about them?—Buf- saw him in Russia. lial Courier, _ which humanity ~ seeks to dodge..death,: the \universally| Flaky pie crust is only one of ‘dreaded. i 5 'numberless details in the sym- WETS is a creature of late hours, many The wets find comfort in the claim, the Association | are flocking back to Bdffalo’s| Under the smoke screen of “light wines and beer” can-/ the tradition, no matter how it may “A rough estimate,” he continues, or wholly supporting themselves by that the fault was on the side of per cent of our students are work- jfrom clerking in drug stores and{ jin the country’s telephoney telegraph, electric railway and Not only young men, but also and blast furnaces. 4 a young women in the state normal : With the youth of the count Ee REINCARNATION | to Buffalo’s come from other places = “Together we played on.the ‘banks of the Nile. I was @/are crying that the nation is going “A beautiful belief, whether you agree with. her or not. | | phonic harmony of a perfect din- 3 [ner Often it is the one subcon- : Maneyrolle, French flyer, goes up in a gliding machine | white napkin is put back on the and soars three hours 21 minutes ‘before coming down. feeble, ‘ wee More interesting than the flight is his machine. It has! pUanelieed, yet indispensable to big wings, looks like a dragon fly, and is a copy of the craft) (to3" Porc touitanar enalees sused by Langley 34 years ago in our country. technicalities. A particularly hard After wandering far, the architecture of flying machines | fat. Not mixed with finger tips, ‘thus gets back to copying the bird. The return is logical,|>¥t cut, in quickly with a knife. 2 Seine ’ A | Bread flour ‘by preference. Per- f for the bird is the perfect flyer. And man cannot improve jforations to prevent _ blistering. f «on nature. Thrust into a hot oven, Baked to tl pie eee ja turn. The perfect co-ordination + ‘and timing is no less than real art WHISKEY | Work. : » Eight hundred thousand barrels of whiskey remain in, [elicious pie crust is just one of E < government bonded warehouses, announces Prohibition Gom- | %,{Ronsand delatissere nus to per i» missioner Haynes. This is 160,000,000 quarts, or a quart and jeasier. In ‘fact; for ages man has zu half for every person in our country. “ “been under-estimating the mass of [: It’s only a normal three months’ supply, for in the old detail his women marshal thrice saloon days the average American drank six quarts of dis- Hp has doeenPeneting refle z tilled spirits a year. wpe eae tions on ‘her executive capacity as | ‘Spi Prohibition came because some insisted | a posaible business campetttor. | | .dn drinking the share of others as well as their own. “tried to corner the entire output. A few | Somehow he has not caught the re- ;markable similarity between or- |ganizing a good meal and organiz- | ‘ing a business program. But if) ™ THEFT ‘she is able to marshal a group of Aes 5 See a Hea: ticklish jobs of the complexity of! In Cincinnati a man is fined $5 for stealing a newspaper’ flaky pie crust, why, in the course from a subscriber’s front porch. lof time, may we not expect her to} This will “strike” a responsive chord” in many a heart.|be capable of anything? — Grand) _There are few things more aggravating than to find one’s | Forks Herald. | gpaper missing. These little things are the really intimate ¢——-—— | ey a | ‘problems of life. If you doubt it, try to start a conversation. | ATH 1 # about the politicians or tariff with the man who’s just dis- OUGHT oo covered his daily paper stolen. | Yor the hope which fs laid up! for | vom in heaven, whereof ye heard he- | fore in the word of the truth of the| cospel.—Colossians 1:5. | 'n this world it, is not what we | take up, but what we give up, that makes us rich—Henry Ward Beech- | er, H! i GAMBLING ' King Alfonso of Spain watches reckless gambling in the £ baccarat rooms at Deauville. Urged to try his luck at cards, he refuses, saying, “I am not rich enough to gamble.” = Neither is any one else, though usually they do not dis- ALAR: Ao Me ,, cover it until their financial feathers have been plucked. This! there were libraries in ancient + Alfonso displays rare sense, for a king. _ | Egypt. 2 i | seems to}, Ais CHAPTER II i‘ When at last Eve arrived at ‘the place of pines again, and saw. the far, spectral glimmer of Quin- tana’s fire, the girl was almost breathless. But dawn was not:very faraway and there remained/little | time for the thking alive of a,dan- gerous man. 4) Where two enormous pinesgrew! close together near a sapling,.she knelt down, and, with both hands, scooped out a big hollow in the:im- memorial layers of pine needles. Here she placed her trap. It*took all her strength and skill to set it; to fasten the chain around the base of the sapling. And now, working with only. the faintest glimmer of her torch, she tovered everything with pine needles. k It was not possible to restore the st floor; the place remained le—a darker, rougher patch on the ‘bronzed carpet of needles beat- en smooth by decades of rain and snow. No animal would have trod- den that suspicious spate. But it was with man she had' to deal—a dangerous but reasoning man with few and atrophied instincts—and with no experience in traps; and, therefore, in no dread of them. Before she started she had thrown a cartridge into the breech of cher rifle. Now she pocketed her torch and seated herself between the two big pines and about three feet behind the hidden trap. Dawn was not far away. She looked upward through high pine-) tops where stars shone; and saw no sign of dawn. But the watcher ‘by the fire beyond was astir, now, in the imminence of dawn, and evi-: dently meant to warm himself he- fore leaving Eve could hear him piling dry wood on the fire; the light on the tree trunks grew redder; a pungent reek of smoke was drawn through the fcrest aisles, She sniffed it,} listened, and wached, ‘her rifle! across her kenes. Eve never had been afraid of any-} thing. She was not afraid of this man. If it came to combat she would have to kill. It never entered ‘ont:nued From Our Last Issue) her mind to fear Quintana’s rifle.| watched him prep ring. Even Clinch was not as swift with! Only Stormont! knew ‘him to, be ‘Quintana and no a rifle ag e1020 aapnes RLDORAN COMDANY if Shg thought of Stofmont—sat there'in the terrific darkness loving him, jher heart of a.child tremulous with adoration. Then the memory of Darragh pushed in and hot hatred possessed her. ‘Always, in her heart, she had rusted the man. * Instinct had warned her. A spy! What‘evil had he worked already? Where was her father? Evidently Quintana’ had escaped ‘him at Drowned. Valley... . Quintana wag:yonder by his fire, preparing to flee: the wilderncss where men hunted him. ... But where was Clinch? Had this sneak, Darragh, betrayed him? Was Clinch already in the ¢lutch of State Troopers? Was he in jail? At the thought.the girl felt slight- ly faint, then a rush cf angry blood stung her face in the darkness. Ex- cept for games and excise violation the stories they told about Clinch} were lies. \ He had nothing to fear, nothing to be ashamed of. Harrod had driven him to lawlessness; the Gov- | ernment took away what was left him to make a living. He had to! live. What if he did break laws; made by millionai ane fanatic! | What of it? He had her love and her respect—and her deep, deep pity. And these were enough for any girl to fight for. Dawn gpread a silvery light above tho pines, but Quaintana’s fire still ‘reddened the tree trunks; and she could hear him feeding it at inter- vals. Finally she saw him. He came | out-on the edge of the ruddy ring; of light and stood peering arround at the woods where already a vague grayness was: revealing nearer trees. , Wher, finally, he turned this back and looked at fire, Eve rose and | stcod between the two big pines. Behind one of them she placed her rifle. It was growing lighter in the woods. She could see Quintana in the fire ring and outside—-saw him go to the spring rivulet, lie flat,| drink, then, on his knees, wash face an? hands im the icy water. It became plain to her that he Was nearly ready to depart. She And how she could see him plainly, and; He had a light basket pack. He put some articles into it, stretched himself and yawned, pulled on his hat, ‘hoisted the pack and fastened it to his back, stood staring at the fire for a long time, then, with a ssudderf upward look at the zenith ! where a ‘slight flush stained a cloud, he picked up hih rifle. At that moment Eve called to hint im a clear and steady voice, The effect on ‘Quintana was in- stant; he was behind a ‘tree before ‘| hey voice ceased. “Hallo! Hi! You over there!” she called again. “This is Eve Strayer, I’m looking for Clinch! He hasn’t been home all night. Have you seen ‘him?” , After a. moment she saw Quin- tana’s head watching her—not at the shoulder-height of a man but close to the ground and just above the tree roots. “Hey!” she cried. “What's the matter with you over there? I’m asking you who you’ are and if you’ve seen my father?” After a while she saw Quintana coming toward her, circling, creep- ing swiftly from tree to tree. As he flitted through the shadows the trees between which she was standing hid her from him a mement, Instantly she placed her rifle on,the ground and kicked the pine needles. over it. ss As Quintana continued his en- circling maneuvers Eve, apparently perplexed, walked out into the clear space, putting the concealed trap between her and Quintana, who now came stealthily toward her froin the rear. It was evident that he had rec- onnoitered sufficiently to satisfy bimself that the girl was alone and that no trick, no ambustade, threat- ened ‘him. And now, from behind a pine, and startlingly near her, came Quin- tana, moving with confident grace ydt holding ‘his rifle ready for any emergency, Eve’s horrified stare wds natural; she had not. realized that -any man could wear so evil a smile. Quintana stopped ‘short a dozen paces away. The dramatic in him demanded of the moment its full value. He swept off his hat with a flourish, bowed deeply where he stood. ~ “Ah” he cried gaily, “the happy encounter, Senorita.” God is too good" to us. .. And’ it was ‘but a moment since-my thoughts were of you! I swear it!—” It was not fear; it was a sort of slow horrow of this man that began to creep over the girl. She stared brilliant eyes, at ‘his thick toc red—shuddered slightly. But the toe of her right foot touch- cd the stock of her rifle under the pine needles, x She held herself under control, “So i u, she said \unsteadily. other. ’ had: ‘been swifter—thank God!— I thought our people had caught you.” : TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1922 Quintana laughed: “Charming child,” he gaid, “it is I wha have caught your people.’ And now, my God!—I catch. you! ... It is ver’ funny. Is it not?” She looked straight into Quin- tana’s black eyes, ‘but the look he weturried sent the shamed ‘blood surging into her face, “By God,” the said between his white, even teeth—“by God!” ‘Staring at her he slowly disen- gaged his pack, let it fall behind lim on the pine needles; rested his rifle on it; slipped out of his mack-; inaw and laid that across hig rifle —always keeping his brilliant eyes! on her. His lips tightened, the muscles in his dark face grew tense; this eyes ‘Lesame a blazing insult. For an instant he stood there, un- encumbered, a wiry, graceful shape, in fis woolen breeches, leggings, and gray shirt open at the throat. Then he took a step toward her. And the girl watched him, fascinat- ed. One pace, two, a third, a fourth— the girl's involuntary cry echoed the stumbling crash of the man thrashing, clawing, ‘scrambling in che clenched jaws of the bear-trap amid a whirl of flying pine needles. He screamed once, tried to rise, turned ‘blindly to seize the jaws that clutched him; and suddenly crouch- ed, loose-jointed, cringing like a trapped wolf—the” true , fatalist among our lesser brothers,’ (Cont nued in Our Next Issue) ADVENTURE OF | | THETWINS | By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy and Nick asked all of Moth- er Goose’s friends about her broom. Doctor Foster hadn’t seen it al- through he needed it very much, he said, to sweep ‘away the puddles cn his way to Glo’ster. The Fat Man of Bombay said he was busy enough hunting for his Pipe that the snipe had run off with, without undertaking anything more. Taffy the Welshman knew nothing about the broom. Tweedledum said he knew nothing about either, but that he would ask| Tweedledee, as soon as they were on speaking terms. \ The Baker’s-man knew nothing. The Barber knew nothing. The Jolly Miller knew nothing. The Farmer op His Gray Mare knew nothing. It was Simple Simon, who gave them an idea. “Why, it’s as easy as can be,” he told them. “Whenever you wish to find anything, don’t go to the place you expect to find it at all! Profit by my experience! When I want a after all, whale, do I go to the ocean?’No, sir,! I get my: mother’s pail. “If I look for plums, do I go to the orchard? No, sir, I go to the thistle-patch.” > “Then where shall we look for Mother Goose’s broom?” asked Nan- cy eagerly. . “Not up in the sky, that’s certain,” nodded, Simple Simon. ‘ “Look down on the ground. Ask Scare-Crow, and Jack O’Lantern, and Snow-Man and Tailor’s Dummy and Jumping Jack and Wooden Soldier.” The Twins thanked him and said they would take his advice. Then they swung themselves down to the earth by a giant cob-web and continued their search. | MANDAN NEW The birth of an infant son, born at a Bismarck hospital is announced by Mr. and Mrs. R. R, Lutz. Mrs, August Timmerman and Mrs. Hans Hanson will entertain the mem- bers of the Mandan chapter of Amer- ican War Mothers at the home of the former this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. J. F. Herman of Elgin, was a bus- iness visitor here yesterday. eet Mr. and Mrs. George Coe, accom- vanied by the former’s grandmother, passed through the city yesterday on their way to Portland, Ore. where they will visit with Dr, H. W, Coe, father of the former. They were for- merly residents of Mandan. John Gress of Judson, suffering! with an infected knee underwent an cneration yesterday, at the Deacon- ness hospital. Wm. Kuebler of Carson, underwent an operation at the Deaconess hos- pital. Mr, Charles Weeks of Almont has entered the Deaconess hospital for treatment. Lyddite, the high explosive is so called after the English town of Lydd, in Kent, the place of its first manufacture. we nd To usten To You Bors FOR | | { | | About 100 years ago today all of lus were posterity. tf 32 is the freezing point, then 31 s the sneezing point.’ i lie | Twinkle, twinkle, movie star, howd we wonder why you are. j rien Another chorus girl has married a+ | vich man’s son. She took him at his | Pa value. H | emis 1 eld before she killed her husband. | One thing wrong with our homes iis too many couples think a pair beatsa full house, Fuel hint: Pianbs end make a hot fire, burn quickly The small boy tells us his teacher must be froni Germany beeause her marks are so low. || New Hudson River bridge will ne the most costly bridge in the world except auction bridge. A wise married man never chews tobacco or dynamite. Fashion note: Goose pimples will be worn this winter. We may live too fast, but very few girls born in 1900 are 20 yet. We have setting up exercises, but don’t need sitting down exercises. Reauty secret: » Closings one eye while looking at a girl often leaves seratches on the face, In the fall of a very young man's fancy nightly turns to thoughts of Santa Claus, found in one We cun prove it. Two stills were Georgia cemetery. In Paris, it is officially admitted that those erying down with the short skirt have failed. Strange things happen. Angeles man bought a church cuss in instead of to sleep in. Conn., a cat is She evidently A Los to tn New Britain, raising three mice. expects a hard winter, More than 300,000,000 postagw. stamps are printed daily. Why don't sou people pay your bills? Prunes are expected to go up. Heaven help the boarder. Pea pecan One way to relieve traffic conges- tion is sell autos for cash only. Ut is estimated too many want fur coats for Christmas. N oo Two’s company, three’s an argu- ment. ; All pigs try to make hogs of them- selves, CUT THIS OUT. IT IS WORTH MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, ll., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in re- turn a trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, bachache, kid- ney and bladder ailments; and {Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholc- some and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, bilious- ness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. The Mahdi is, to Mohammedans, the expected messenger of Allahl to cémplete Mohammed’s work by con- verting the. world to his religion {or exterminating unbelievers, and \ equitably: to divide all mundane goods. Lobsters evidently use their claws {for working purposes, as well us f weapons, having -been observed ca ‘vying small stones with them while engaged in burrowi FROM GIRLHOOD 10 Woman Relied Upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Empori: Kansas.—“‘I began usin; Lydia a, gi 4 E. Pinkham’s medicines years ago when I was a girl. For several years I lhad severe pains at menstrual _ periods, making me very ¥j| weak andinterfering with my regular du- ties. I tried several remedies without ob- induced to try Lydia Be renichamn's Vo | | | | | ‘stored me to normal health. I often j have occasion and do recommend your | Vegetable Compound to my friends ‘who have troublés similar tomy own. You | may use these facts asa testimonial.’ — | Eva ALDRICH, 218 Union St., Emporia, Kansas. There are many women who first used our Vegetable Compound during their ; girlhood days. They foundit a valuable ; help during trying periods. In later | years they use it whenever they feel | those annoying symptoms which women | often have, | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | pound is a woman’s medicine. It is pre- | pared carefully from the best quality of | I | medicinal plants, whose properties are especially adapted tocorrect the troubles women have. A Chicago woman iwas 60 ‘years «. WOMANHOOD ¥