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PAGE TWO . “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SANDIDATES * PAMPHLET TO - BERETAINED louse Refuses to Restrict Publicity Pamphlet to Basic = Law Requirement REPEAL FAILS ails to Get Majority of All embers ins House and ’ Therefore Fails to Pass house of representatives yes- refused to restrict state publicity pamphlet to the datory constitutional provision, sharp debate. the face of a unanimous report | he committee on elections and tion privileegs, which recommends+ vassage of Hep. Lynch’s bill which ld prohibit candidates from mak- statements in the pamphlet, the se refused to change the present mbers were influenced some- citation of the constitution- ay. afternoon d to the people the ary of » shall print pamphlet and include the measure. tep Jackson, presenting the ¢ tee report, said that it cost 40 to print the pamphiet last year, “d the committee felt it was a us s expense, believing that few peo- read the pamphlet. ‘Right here is a good place to start ur economy program,’ he s Rep. Walker declared the purpose the pamphlet was to make possi- e the ting submitte: d one-man government to be the so-| of information con- asked i URGED BY WOMEN, 3 STATE GOVERNORS TURN PROSECUTORS TO UNRAVEL CRIMES From leit to right Peters and Governor Alfred [wards of New Jersey. BY EDWARD THIERRY NEA Service Sta Writer, New York, Jan. 17.—Has_ the | machinery of th y broken down | in the struggle against crime? Is} Ituion? i} Questions like this are being | 9 the result of this unpre- srning an election to all the voters, cedented situation: nd he favored retention. Rep. er favored its retention, Rey. Twichell said that since the consti tution required a pamphlet to be printed on measures, and the main cost of the pamphlet was the mail-| ing to voters, not much economy would be accomplished by forbidding candidates access to the few extra pages necessary to print individual statements. | Lynch Defends Bill. Rep. Lynch defended his bill, say- | ing that under the Jaw a candidate can use the pamphleg to advertise his own business, and that before the primary election one candidate did use it to advertise a book he is writ-| ing. The measure was indefinitely postponed on an “aye” and “nay vote. The house also found food for de- bate in the Cart-Anderson bill for repeal of the “wide sled law.” Rep.} Anderson maintained that since par-| row-gauged sleys may be shipped] into the state the prohibitory clause of the present law accomplished | \othing. Others declared the wide | led law a real benefit in the winter. | “he bill failed of passa ng | 1 “ayes” to 50 “nays,” 57 being nec- | asary for passage. | “Among the three bills presented | » the house was one by Reps, Heat- | a of Burleigh, and Hempel of Sheridan, increasing the maximum of rm loan bonds which may be is-, 1ed on mortgages made by the farm van department of the Bank of forth Dakota from $20,000,000 to $40,000,000. *Rep. Flom’s bill reducing the mile- se allowance of county superinten- ents from 15 to 10 cents a mile thin the county and from 10 cents | mile to actual railroad fare out- | de the county was amended to per-| ut five cents a mile mileage outside | fe county, and in amended form vas recommended for passage. ‘he report of the permanent em- oyment committee, recommending | nointment of Mrs, Rose Martineson * Bismarck as assistant proof-read- “t was rejected, on contention of sev- yal members that one proof-reader | sufficient. The appointment was veged by the Burleigh county dele- gation. The election bills of Sena- ior Stevens, bringing the present tutates in line with the woman suf- ‘rage amendment of the constitution, were recommended for passage and the committee reports accepted, Many Petitions Received. Among the petitions reeeived by the house was one signed by 9% Stark county residents asking the election laws be amended to permit an illiterate voter to take another} person in the booth with him to as-| ist him ,and also asking that the state ballot be made the same as the| Mifimesota ballot, by elimitating party columns and permitting party designation after the names of the| candidates. Several communications urged passage of a law forbidding} the making of crop mortgages. ‘Am opinion was received from At- torney General Shafer to the effect ‘that separate roll call on emergency clauses are not necessary if a bill| “passes by two-thirds vote. This rule ‘ws followed in the previous session. ill changing the law regarding _removal of county seats, which would E. Fetmove a provision of the’ law de- ‘clared advantageous to Ft. Yates, ‘county seat of. Sioux county, wa: Fecommended for passage with! iments. Under the amendment | am election for the removal a » county seat may be held at any pri- mary. election, if the county seat is nok.-Joatced on a railroad. It re- 8. provision’ which included seats located on navigable Ft, Yates not being on a ‘aot being on the Missouri of an Three governor: hin as many months in three erent states have taken a hand in the solution | murder mysteries that ha baffled police and prosecutors Governor Alfred E. Smith of } York is the latest state executive | to turn criminologist by ordering | investigation of the famous | Ward In as in two others | preceding it, a woman made the| plea for executive interference. | One was a mother of a slain vic- w Mrs, Thomas F. Richards and Smith of New Yorks €harlotie Mills and Former Governor Edward I, Ed- | nor John tim, one a wife, and one a daugh-) | ter. Mother Appeals to Governor Mrs. Mary Peters, mother of Cla- » Peters, asked that Governor nith investigate the killingsof her son last May 15 near White Plains. Her plea came a few days after the court had dismissed the indictment for first. degree murder against | Walter Ward, wealthy young | vice president of the Ward Baking | Company, who gave himself up| last May 22 with the confession | that he had killed Peters’as the ut of a black-mail plot. The | indictment was dismissed for lack | idence. | Mrs. Thomas F. Richards less | | than a month earlier made the plea to Governor John M. Parker of Lousiana that resulted in the in- vestigation of the killing of Rich- s and Watt Daniels at Mer ar ag: Parker of Louisiana; Mrs. Mary Rouge, La. Their ‘bodies were blown by dynamite out of Lake La Fourche during the- inquiry and the nation is watching efforts to place the blame for fhe killings, which occurred last August. Miss Charlotte Mills, daughter of Mrs call upon a state executive to un: ravel a mystery following ‘the fail- ure of county authorities to solve the murders of Mrs. Mills and Rev, Edward Wheel Hall at New Bruns- wick, N. J., last Sept. 14. Letters written by Miss Mills to Governor Edward I, Edwards re- sulted in the appointment of a spe- ute the case. It remanis un- solved, though the inquiry has not been officially closed. In the meantime Edwards has become a United States senator and has been succeeded by Governor G@. 8. Silzer. UNIFORMITY EN WOMEN’S DRESS IMPOSSIBILITY Paris - Woman's dress will never approach the uniform ty of man’s dress, declared Madame Jeanne Paquin, founder and chief owner of one of the oldest of the Paris houses, who has’ just rounded out her 33rd year hion leader and maker of dresses for those who would appear beautiful. “The styles of today range back to those worn by the Egyptians, such as I once saw on the mummies of the now sunken island of Philae,” said Madame Paquin. “If we admit that dressing a beau- tiful woman is an art, then it fol- lows that this art changes as other arts. One cise of such changes lies in social conditions. “The season to season changes come from the fact that fashion creators wish to continue to create. I for instance, as soon as I have completed a creation, wish to pass to something different. I can't help it. It is the creative instinct I obey. “There can for this reason never be a set, uniform style for women, so long as women wish to be beau- tiful and men wish to have them so. “The feminist movement means death to woman’s beauty, and for reason it can never succeed in ce. Our women wish to appear utiful, our men approve of this desire, and, within their means, are willing to pay the bill. “When it was pointed out to Ma- dame Paquin that her own success in business was used as an argument | need son for the feminist movement, sie ob- jects energetically: “Whatever success I have had was due in large part to my husband. My mother ‘insisted that as a girl 1 should learn a trade, to have as a weapon in life. } ecudied~millinery nd when I was married at 19, my usband and I decided to take that line. He knew little about it, but he had a good business head. With- out that I should nan have sue- ceeded. Women are too Nareful. They body te pusa them to ex- rution, Boldness is larely respon- sible for Amer success. Tie great tragedy of a woman's life,” she continued, “often is that she is not good looking, I have known of many of these tragedies. “Behind the smiling exterior of the rich or the highly placed wo- man, the fear of growing old, of not looking well, has hundreds of times brought them to me in tears, “No, so long as a woman is a wo- man, she will Wish to be beautiful, and just so long will there be chan- ges in styles,” Condemns Minority In frish State Dublin, Jan. 17.—Writing regard- ing peace, Kevin O'Higgins, Minister for Home Affairs in the Irish Free State says: “The actual position is. that a body of tne people of the country, though numerically insignificant, refuse to accept the majority will be a decid- ing factor in our political affairs, ire there can’ be no peace ofthe treaty! signed by five plenipotentiaries endorsed by the Dail and accepted by the people. This is straining every nerve ore British power in Ireland and to rob, {rish people of the fruits of their.struggle and. sac- rifices of the last’ six years. We members of the Government elected Discharged Major Sues West Pointer to the Dail Eireann to carry out the treaty would be false to our trust if we acquiesced in any way to such a program.” | A Proclamation LAW AND ORDER DAY that there is a deplorable lack knowledge and appreciation of the immortal documents which define, interpret and safeguard the liberties cf our people, and WHEREAS, there has also been a tendency in recent years to lessen the emphasis upon indivfdual civii responsibility and the development of strength of character, and to rely | altogether too mpch upon the mere passage of laws’ prohibiting certain acts, without seeking to develop an enlightened public ‘conscience which both yields obedience to law and actively sustains the enforcement | thereof, and WHERAS, a nation-wide aggres- sive campaign has been conducted in intoxicating liquor and habit- forming drugs, te: undetming the spirit of obediencd to law and to create a disrespect and contempt for constitution, law and government, and ; / WHEREAS, it seem§ essential to the welfare of our state and country that we should restore the sense of personal civic responsibility and should seek to develop high civic ideals, strength of character and a disposition on the part of the citizen- ship, not only to ebey, but to pro- mote obedience to all laws on our statute books, and. . WHEREAS, te Law-and Order Union has requestec that a day be set aside for the purpose of thus renewing our faith in and allegiancé to’ constitutions, law and govern- ment in state and nation NOW THEREFORE, I, R. A. Nes- tos, Governor of the State of North Dakota, do hereby set aside and des- ignate 4 Sunday, January twenty-eighth as LAW AND ORDER DAY and do hereby urge that from every pulpit in oyr state sermons be preached to emphasize the Christian basis for obedience to law and that uring the days of the Week follow- ing, in schools, lodges, clubs and other public meptings, the study of the constitutions of stategmnd nation, the Declaration of Independence, Washington’s ‘Farewell Address and others of the ‘immortal documents so closely assocated with our growth in liberty, be read and deeply, con- sidered and that every aid be given to-encourage obedience to law and to assist those whose duty it is to enforce them, to the end that higher civic ideals and better conditions may obtain in our state. - Done at the State Capitol at Bis- marck, North Dakota, this sixteenth ; | day of January, A. De 1923. R, A, NETOS, By the Governor: Governor THOMAS HALL, Secretary of State, peace ‘IN SILVER OR GOLD _ The bandanna kerehief h: ; come so popular it ig even invading the ballroom, and: it is;seen in gold aernipe ‘brocade, tied ina careless be- — CRETONNE JACQUETTES Jaequette blouses of eretonne and large figured prints, made “Mp for southern sport wear, ate boend with . Eleanor Mills, was the first to | cial state attonney general to pro- | WHEREAS, it has become maniéegt} Prospect. of} by those who profit by the traffic WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1923 ‘FASHION KEEPS | ‘AWAY FROM STREETPARADE ne Dance Halls and Tea Rooms Great Show Palaces of Paris Now Paris, Jan, 17-Turning away from | his hotel with a few hours of idle | time at his disposal, the visitor in Paris who seeks the show windows | of the life of the capital will, within a few blocks, find what he is looking | for in one of the many establish- | ments which the French call ¢ ings.” The most popular places num- ber at least a dozen, They are small tea and supper rooms. A pompous and uniform man is on duty at the street door, but, the place itself is like as not tucked away on an upper floor away from the noise’ of the street. The world passes through these places, but America furnished the | | nucleus of the stock companies and the audence that stage a constantly shifting show. Half the preople pre ent have come to dance, the others | to watch and to talk, and to make new friends. Fashion does not parade Streets in Paris. New gowns seen on the rte de la Paix as taey may be on the “Main Streets” of America. Many of them appear on models at the races, on the stage, | and to a less extent in theatre aud- ionces but the tourist sees more of ‘the dressmakers and the milline work at the tea tables or in nigat cafes than at all the other “peacock | alleys” to which the visitor has fe the | re not American jazz bands, or “masters of syncopation,” still predominate at he “dancings,” but they are being Frenchified, American music ranks | as the best for dancing, but Ameri- cans abreast of the times at home | sometfmes notice music they first heard several years ago on the other side. When interest begins to lag on the | waxed floor entertainers, chiefly American, are brought on to stim- ulate trade, and they and .the sng- lish nearly monopolize that part of | the show. Professional dancers also j of marriage is going on trail before are often American, although the | a Chicago court. oot “professional” who, dances with the | judge will be called upon to al- peoren whose escorts come only to | locate the affections of a man to PG raOMER ERE TER : °| The‘one woman'is the man’s legal- or of some un- ‘jy wedded wife who has borne him i | death. aliving, KATHLEEN By Roy J. Gibbons NEA Staff Correspondent Chicago, Jan. 17.—The institution certain nationality, f Models, actresses, and. fashion | "© SO “ leaders show their beautif | eto ming shor saya, abecauea POY RCS ca ives ast cuiin Genero, Eee at these places, and m y P Occ e eee | cause I fought and struggled away customer goes to an expensive dres: A a maker whose gown attracted atten- |™Y young years tlfat he might rise to prosperity.” tion there gnd whose wearer, v.. the | dressmakef’s payroll, found some-| The other woman, though bound one to’ introduce her to the wealthy him by no leggl tie, declares tha ed with him 11 years There is a strange contrast of peo- | his wife and has borne him five chil- i ple in these elaborate dance rooms, | dren. |where'a cup of tea costs a dollar| “He's mine,” she says, “because I | and cake is extra. English is spoken | love him and he loves me. And love | tlmost as much as French, with Rus- | is greater than any man-made law. | sian a fair third.Much of the French | “The principals in this case are | has a foreign accent, for there is|John C. Curtin, wealthy lumbermtan, 4 queer procession of vague nation-| Curtin’s wife, and Miss Kathleen ) alties constantly drifting througa } Morrell. ; the pleasure circles of Paris, There! Mrs, Curtin has had Miss Morrell are many of these well-dressed men | arrested on a technical charge of ey: women with hard faces, who | contributing to the delinquency of talk little of themselves, and who| her own children—otherwise. the hoe to bavenno occupation. Tren | strange love tangle might have gone | tere 8 considerable element of the | on undiscovered as it has for the |frothier part’ of upper society but! tase 41 years, j the real audience is composed of the! “while the two women await a Pedy set tourists, from abroag! and) surtfhearing, which (has been con® | the French provinces who have come | t/eg this 4¢ what they say in sup- | to: see how Paris amuses itself. Sarin ann eae ney ee i port of their rival claims: Dancing seems to be the least con- | : i cern of the “dancings.” Nevertheless | BY the Mother Who Is Not a Wife it goes on constantly on the small| “Jt is true I am not married by crowded , floor,\ frequently linoleum-| law to John Curtin, But in the covered, faster in the waltz than | eyes of God I am John Curtin’s wife American like, and slower in the oth-| 8nd our children are pure in His er dances. | Sight because they are born of love. Dancing in Paris often has been; “To every woman belongs the in- said to be dying out, but so far there | alienable right yto bear children. has been no eduction in the number | John Curtin was my preordainet, of these places with queer names| mate and the fact fe already was like “My, Sister's Garden” and “The | bound to another woman whom he Se Different.” Real dancing mean-j|no longer loved never tharked a time, in the big,.old-time ballrooms | barrier which I should not have over- of the Bal Bullier, Moulin de la Ga-| stepped. lette. and other place linked with “We had our little apartment—a the history of the artist quarters, | place of love it was—and John would foes. on as™ulways, unspoiled.by tae come every day and fondle _ his after-war oddities of the “best pla- | babies. p a “I cooked most of his meals.- I | ironed -his shirts, darned his socks, |cared for his wardrobe. I used to tell him: ‘A wedding ceremony would not make us \ny closer than now. |'Those 11 years were beautiful. “Yes, it was hard at times present- ing a false and double appearance to | neighbors and friends who thought we were really married. But it was | only the deception that hurt—other- wise my heart was untroubled. “Though very happy, I have prac- tically lived a living death. My rela- tives haven't heard from me ‘for years. I dropped out of sight. “Let. Come what will, I havé had my dream—the only kind that really counts for any woman, I have’ been ADDIE MAY usually due to straining tipated. ’. ujol being ‘a lubricant keeps the food waste’ soft and therefore prevents straining. Doctors prescribe Nujol because: it not only soothes the suffering of piles but relieves the irritc- tion, : brings’ comfort ond helps to re: pad ge | uj 9 a a Cu { nly will testity at the Bastrop’! (Lajzopen tearing on ‘the -2 of P, Watt Daniel and Thomas F Richards bya maeked mob... FRo1 pr af Practically lve 8 wedi Closer than we are nows boys and fyi wee ; DOES LOVE'OR LAW GIVE : WOMAN RIGHT TO MAN? Wife and “Other Woman,” Both Mothers,| Open Fight in Chicago Court to Settle Question —. £4 totell him. fee make ws any Bestancete neigh MORRELL loved by a man and borne him chil- dren and I, in return, have loved that man.” ‘ By the Wife and Mother “For 25 years I have worked and labored for my husband to help him to wealth and Andependence and 1 shall not divorce him or give him up. “It is not true I condoned for 11 years my husband’s relationship with Miss Morrell and sat by con- tent to let the affair go along, so long as he would support me and our boy, now 21. ned of my — husband's in 1913. The second child of their illict union was then about to be born. I paid the Mor- rell woman $600, if she would break off the affair and leave town. “She took the money, which I can KEEP LOCKING YOUNG \It’s Easy—If You Know Dy. Edwards’ Olive Tablets ~ The secret of keeping young is to fee oung—to do this you must watch your liver and bowels—there’s no need of having sallow complexion—dark rings under, ‘your eyes—pimples—a bilious look in your face—dull eves with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness cumes from inactive bowels and liver. i Dr. Edwards, a well-nown physician n Ohio, perfected a vegetaple com- sound mixed with olive oil toact on the iver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. _Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- titute: for calomel, are gentle in their iction vet always effective. They bring :bout that natural buoyancy which all hould enjoy by toning up the liver and, earing, the system of impurities. Dr.Edwards’OliveTablets are known *y their olive color, 15¢ and 30¢ —$ ———————aS— prove, promises. “The state should look after Mi Morrell’s children and give them th cure they need, Surely it is too much to ask that I do it. “If I thought my husband would be. true, I would forgive and for- get, because I still love him, and 1 will never let this woman, who has stolen him from me, break down th only remaining barrier—the” law— and take him a “With band has frequently give this woman up. “I pressed the charges brought about her arrest in faith for the children’s sake, not act through revenge.” BEAVERS TO BE EXTERMINATED AT ST. LAWRENCE Brockville, Ont., Jan>~16—Beavers have become so destructive along the St. Lawrence iver that owners of islands in Canadian and United States waters have been given per- mission by the Dominion government to exterminate them on the Capadian side of the boundary. An experienc- ed trapper has been engaged for the season and will make his headquart- ers on Dillingham’s island. The presence of the beaver was revealed last spring by the number of fallen trees that had been gnawed through at the base. Beavers have not been seen along the St. Lawrence before in a quarter of a century. They gre protected by game laws on the New York side of the rive: but failed to live up to her in his eyes my hus- promised to wh ood 1 did e WHITE-COSTUME The rage for the all-white costume continues. White-satin, georgette and taffeta are effectively beaded with pearls as well as erystal or colored beads. YouWillNever how delicious Karo is until you taste it. Nor how economical it it to the entire family. derful energy food it until is until you serve Nor what a won- is for little folks you serve Karo spread on sliced bread. Your grocer sells Karo. Why not make some delicious Divinity Fudge today? % cup Karo, Red 2 Eas (whites only) Boil sugar, Karo, salt and water mass in cold stiffen, add nuts and Faisine, an plate. This candy may also covered with drips chocolate, De Salling Representative ts Sales Co, Minn. ct 827 Lumber Exchange FREE Products > OF can Ld & 4% cup Water iv. id drop fr ‘made into a roll and. ‘half-inch. slices. died ‘pine ‘Ask your grocet for recipe foller of Cook Book, or write oo Cons, ¥ cup Chopped Ns & cap Chopped Rats Selt ts 1 teaspoon Vanilla ‘aro talt and water together until it forms a hard on the hot syrup, beating constantl seiff and gradually pour hen mixture bewine s mM onto oil ‘may be then, Refinins Co., Dept. A, Argo, Illinois y Undertakers Embalmer in “g Licensed- . DAY: PHONE 246 i PERRY: UNDERT. Day Phone 100 Licensed Embalmer in NIGHT PHONES 246-887 NG PARLORS V Night Pone 100 or 681 BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY