The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1923, Page 4

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" Py Es PAGE FOUR -—-r—_——— THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE te “Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. Matter. “BISMARCK TRIBUNE GO. - ~~, - Publisher Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO. = - .- - = DETROIT Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS wise credited in this paper and also the local news publishe herein. also reserved. * MEMBE R AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Daily by carrier, per year... . Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... oo 5 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... . Mee " THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) A GOOD APPOINTMENT Bismarck has a particular interest in the state board o administration, because of the fact that the state capitol i: located her It is nece ary for. the city to coope Dakota in this endeavor. H. P. Goddard, to the board of administration, i conditions and ability was particularly made plain by his successful handling war work and his general business qualifications. 0 THE UNKNOWN How would you like to be an arctic explorer? the driver if he yields to fear and d iscouragement. determination, brain and refusal to be ships and obstacles. Like the man on the sledge. wolves. Armed only with his bare hands, starvation pangs. dogs. The brain guides him to his destination as he move: on toward the gorgeous aurora borealis, the mystic lights o: him to defy all beasts. an almost foodless land. The explorer in the country ef eternal snow depends, fo his existence, on his brain. the unknown in our daily lives, power. And too many of us stop leave school. Brain is your greates with lesser hardships and obstacles. TRAGEDY Six-year-od Emma Fuchs dressed as a gipsy, real, grabbed a pistol as if to defend himself against peril. shot. They buried the little girl. found dead on little Emma’s grave. mistake by suicide. “T didn’t know it was loaded.” take a chance on being a murderer by accident. PROHIBITIVE Beatty of McCall’s magazine. “brought about by the Balkan wars, World War and the pres : afford to maintain them at all.” = High price is the greatest prohibition agent. =the drinking. upkeep. DRUNKEN i heard in their apartment. Police break in. found dead. Such cases used to. be common, when saloons were run- “ming wide’ open./ Now they are occasional, and gradually growing fewer. Many claim that prohibition is a complete failure. Deep in their hearts they know they are deceiving themselves. Most of us will live to see prohibition a real success, though not a pleasant outlook for some. GIANT Pele - G. L. Hyder, a transfer agent of the penitentiary at Hunts- “ville. Tex., attracts much nattention on an eastern trip. He is : seven feet five inches tall. : gees many undersized people would trade skeletons Swith him. Some time in the future, probably in another 25 years, scientists will regulate human height by artifically -4stimulating the pituitary gland at the base of the brain. . It regulates our growth. { Sn a ee MONEY = 1k checks passing through American: clearing houses in b gun week totaled $77 for each $69 in the correspond- mig week a year ago. : It means, that moneysis changing hands faster. Which, gi fm turn means that more commodities are being bought and 4 ; : ws tp == However, are you 2? Not so loud. Fe CAPITALISM | . , Russia comes reluctantly back to the fold. ‘Two-fifths its “bigh business” \now ae coneratien by private capital, d 1 t last January. cmt tat happened in Russia in,1922. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! D., as Second Class 8 Kresge Bldg. Fifth Ave. Bldg.| The Assoc ated Press is ‘exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE |,.¢ EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express — | the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented herein order that our readers may have both sides ot ‘important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, | | A DESPERATE REMEDY IN THE RUHR | sort of potentiality. | pected of it in London and Rome —~| while Paris prefers the evil of the | invasion to the evil that could no longer be endured. ds aut the Ruhr the ness Juropean ‘The invasion may, prov vored of farce. ction of/a constructive kind, least, the strike ‘Germany to Germans. They ‘ionger can hug their delusion 0 | invincibility. The. Ruhr invasion brews any Evil ig ex- occupancy may | precipitate the clouded solution of tuation into clear- the finishing stroke to a tragedy that It may compel illumines no of Germany is revealed 5.00 | Mat on her back; Berlin defines the ind one of the largest of the state institutions. rate with the state in building a town that is worthy of being the capital of North | and her citizens have expended great sums of money who has been appointed | with her sin, thay she must pay in position to be of much service to the state through his intimate knowledge of local to retain this cooperation for the state. Mr. Goddard’s business experience ought to be of great value on the board, which now has two appointive members from [eho the eastern-part of the state and one from the western. Mr. | ‘22 Goddard’s fitness for the problems he will have to deal with It sounds | « better from a distance, with the thermometer 60 below zero | sobunte and death running alongside the dog-sledge, ready to clutch | 20t, Probable. As you think of it, it occurs to you that you also are an explorer of the unknown as you go on through life seeking { /ournal. =wealth, romance, adventure, happiness. Whether you make | the trip successfully to journey’s end depends on your; nerve, ; conquered by hard- | A queer and interesting, thing about this explorer. The dogs that haul him are savage brutes, first cousin of ‘the the man could be | mouth of the Ku Klux Klan is pro- ‘downed and devoured by any one of his dogs aching with But the man has a high-powered brain. That brain enables him to control his pack of half-savage 3 | sible for the two murders last | und Jette! . gave him advantages f |summer. It is no justification that | for which ‘our colleges and uni- the original purpose of this under- yersities can provide only a “feeble | ‘the Far North: Brain has given him firearms that enable Brain also supplies him with food in So-with each of us, exploring | developing it when we Man conquers the barren snow country with its frightful , cold. The example should be inspirational to us, faced only to scare ja hideous scandal over the district grandpa. Then grandpa, to make his pretended scare more | and a stain upon the state. { Di walked up Market Street, Philadel- A! rganized crime is bad enough, | r two centuries ago today with but no condemnation is severe The other day, in a New York cemetery, grandpa was | He had expiated his | Pioneer Press. | Never point a pistol at anyone unless you are willing to Turkish harems are rapdily becoming fewer, says Bessie high lights u “The economic conditions ¥ ent war with Greece have made the upkeep of expensive es- r ede t 4 ‘tablishments prohibitive. Harems are being reduced in size | letins and will feel an intimate re- | hickory tree postofiice. =to meet the ever diminishing incomes, and many men cannot | sret that the battle was lost. It’s just @ glamor of the incident. “auestion of time until high price of hooch will stop most of |i It ‘isn’t the original cost of a thirst, it’s the | Four friends go on a drunk in an eastern city. A shot is so nto hope, at least ,that this un- | One man is getting $77 for each $69 you got a year | jhe touched taught him something, Germans as a defengless people. 0} Germany was lecked, she loat the ~| War. When sthe Germang admit that fact, they have made the first step toward recove Instead of blocking every settlement,’ they | perhaps will be convinced, because f compelled, of their obligation to repair some of the damage they did. In American phrase, Ruhr business is maybe this Will operate as a/ “showndown” all round. If go, it | will be a blessing, It may show | Germany that she cannot get away | up! | ince the difference possible and what is impossible. Germany must pay what she can, en if to do so hurts. France cannot get all she but is entitled to what she | It may show between what i in | ments are sure to occur, as witness | f | Memel. ‘There may be some feroci- | ous fights. Well, when these local | |affrays are over, more practicable | arrangements may be discovered. | ~~~~ Europe readjust- | Tiere ig no use predicting a gen- d everything that he learned he | war and complete ruin. Such | used.” But he ud not content ‘eful upshots are possible, but | merely to set type. He gave his And something de-| days and |cided needed to be done, | perate situation alw: |desperate remedy, nights to studymg and A des- | imitating the virtues of the great requires @ | masters of English and emerged Minneapolis | with a style which was “dis lined movement of a versatile = ae | mind.” Without a university train- CRIME MASKED AS VIRTUE ng, he yet came to be, Profes- Sherman in his essay Our whole system of criminal | ; klin says, “one of the most | justice is built upon the enferce-| widely and thoroughly cultured | wi ; ment of law by officials duly con- | men of h's age,” ; stituted under the law. The “sen- j tence of God upon evil” in the As a printer and | publisher he became familiar with jcurrent literature; and the train- jing which he had, through hig own wide, voracious reading, his exten- | j Sive travel and his association with jeminent men of America, Englang | hand France, in pol . seience | fanity and mockery as revealed by the Mer Rouge hearing, which re- moves all doubt that the hooded j organization was directly respon- ground order was the enforcing of better public mors It goes rath- ‘er in aggravation. No group of ;men has the right to install itself | as the keeper of public morality | substitute.” ’ " | When he diéd, in 1790, the, print- | |ers of Paris assembled in a gquate | near where he “had lived, aings w | their “sticks” stood pefore: thei | “cases” ready to set up thvir® com- {mon tribute to their great tellaw> printer. So printers today, thouglk r |or to assume it is better than its | | neighbors. The violent reformer is quite as bad as the sniveling t moralist. Secret government is &! they no longer need “sticks” and’ rebellion at ibest./The supreme|have substituted linotypes for head of the Klan will only be| « es,” will remember the patron nt of their trade, whose auto-< biography wag the first American | laughed at when he proclaims “its | ¢ | aims are legitimate and its meth; {ods above reproach.” In Moorhouse | togk to have a world tedding. All | parish it set out to reform the/| | members of his craft will share in | community and ended by throwing | the celebration of the achievement | of the apprentice. who “adorably” | rolls under his arm, and bey ne in time a master among the. ‘enough for -crime secretly and | Paul! greatest—New York Times. compactly organized. — St. Running the a matcael ADVENTURE OF Pe oe ‘ine |__ THE TWINS A SHI ;to pathos the story of Wallace Reid has been read in the font and breadth of the land. It has j been told in a fray t0 throw the | By Olive Barton Roberts nm a courageous; Chris Crow was cross and no won- struggle to conquer the drug habit | der. He got a fearful valentine from .|and the circumstances have pace iaeiebaey, * such that a large part of the coun- 4 ‘ P Mi | try hung with interest on the bul-/,,U¢ #ot it out af his box in the ; He wouldn't nybody what was init, but flow |. may be hoped that the sermon will! Sttight home and sulked. The way not be missed in the romantie | People found out about it was that The fam. | Chris w. put.out, he dropped | t is announced, gave full pub |V#lentine, and it fell down to the icity to the cause of the young ac-|#'Und, landing plumb on top ‘of |tor’s breakdown with the view “to | Sally Sparrow who read it, and be arousing the American people to|i?& @ gossip, spread the news zt the necessity “of suppressing the | once. It \ | narcotic traffic,” and there is rea- | “Old as | soul, And a gloomy old soul is he, drugs |He calls ‘Caw, Saw,’ from his’ deep j tell Crow is a gloomy old timely death will be a warning to} the users of the lethal which soothe and stimulate only to dark hole, produce the fatal reaction. Way down in the hickory tree, | There is nothing new or different | “Old Chris Crow is a greedy old soui, {in the story of Wallce Reid. Every} And a greedy old soul is he, {section tells and retells it for its; He ate the daughter of old own vfctims, but it is to a limited | Mole, audience and on a relatively un-| And alas no more is she. [known subject. With, Hollywood | “Old Chris Crow is a stingy old soul, for its setting and a young, popular | And a stingy old soul is he, end romantic screen artist for its He said not a word of ‘some corn ne jhero the tragedy of Wallace Reid | stole, is enacted to the world. It will be} No, nary a word said he. | lamentable if it is without effect.— |“Old Chris Crow is a plain old soul, | St. Paul Dispatch. |__An ugly old soul is he. ————— |He’s iyst as black as a lump of coal, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN PRINTER | Quitd black, 'twixt y d % | There is wide celebration today |«ojq ich Grew a) An Cra a |of the two hundredth anniversary soul, of the entering of Benjamin Frank-| oh a clumsy soul is he, lin upon bis veaas ae Sor tera |He'walks like a sailor with quite a a. | roll, with pride, especially by those of Her: t's trade, that when, crowned with | aay" vaicrtine is ont Ti teow the Fighest political scientific and] “y Vuucntine is old : Lees dit Wen heres ane |For he likes first rate to boast und blow, jearth’s goods and good-will, he ” Ste ieee {rote himself down ag “Beniamin| Way up in sa eka ry ieee if |Franklin, Printer.” Burke called! ,, ape a) adie] him “friend of the human race,” | I don’t think it’s very polite,” de-~ and Condorcet addressed him as aj ‘!@red Nancy. Ay sant: people “modern Prometheus”: ‘ut he, ; 8nd nice valentines? 3 famed as philosopher, scientist and| Mr Stamns, the . dairy postman, statesman, seemed to wish to be |C2me close and whispered something. Mike ISABEL OSTRANDE Blie BEGIN HERE TODAY he report of 2 revolver, follow: hurrying foctsteps on the stai Dete ry and fh uses had not been in her studio for three | weeks, ‘ “Let's have a “talk, then, with the affable gentleman on the floor b low,” Ba suggested. “I'll wager | st he won't take so long this time to| ps answer a summons!” ¢ “Police headquarters! Sergeant if he doesn’t open the door in three minutes, break it down!” The snoring ceased instantly in a sound between a squeal and a grunt. he began furiously, but Craig, at a EVERETT TRUE | gesture from ward. | “I'm the detective and the Barry, stepped s bedroom with Craig doggedly d glanced about him. he ood th drooping ears lifted’ overed that it w moth-eaten ist’s art, ing gown, and flap; have no use for any of them!” BY CONDO = ECC, DOBSON, SVE SuCCSeDED IN SOME OF THE PAPER SINCE You Gor RGADING. IT ——S Temembered first and last es aj “Shi” he. said. “Chris deserves it member of that guild which has{all. It’s from Oscar Owl. He sent elven philosophers, scientists nna Oscar an. wful one last year, \and statesmen the means of appeal ta‘| Oscar has heen saving up ever since.” the minds of men. “Well, dear knows!” declared Nic: To him as an apnrentics h's *h| “Oscar's no angel, either.” waa Minoniving.” “Everythine that (To’Be Continued.) _ (Gopyright, 192, NEA Sérvice.) SCOUT AROUND THE AND Locate THS OTHER SECTION NU Us, Lu. venta 4 I AM i) MPMiz. 0 for- signed from frien’, Profe onov, to rush | headquarters to investigate the mur- from the latter's rooms on the fifth| der on the floor just below you here flgor of a New York apartment] tonight, sir, and I'd like a word with hogse. They diseover the body of| you,” he “If you don't h n Vane, society por-| want ‘to questions T'll tr , im ber, studio apart-| call th gon and you can come ten third fitor, Tadd, a} downtown and talk to the chief!” Wine ‘artist on the second floor] “Well, shut the door behind you Griswold, an irascible bachelor on| both of you, and sit down unless thg fourth, and Patricia Shaw, | you want to call in the whole police magazine writer on the sixth, deny | department!” exclaimed Griswold, “I ng heard the shot. iss Shaw] suppose I can put on a_ dressing the first interviewed, that she gown. knéw Miss Vane very slightly ana | He turned and paddled off toward in wake, while Bafry seated him- y corner an old hound and one as though to advance ergeant looked twice before an ancient pecimen of urned presently in the The next instant there came a rat-| slippers. tle of bolts and the door was flung} “Let us get this farce over as open ot Misclose Grixwold's lanky | quickly as possible, if you pléase.” frame clad in a scant nightshirt} “Do you know any of the other with a skulleap upon his grizzled s of this house?” head. onally, no, and I do not “What the devil do+you nfean?”| to!” ‘retorted Griswold. “I! FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1928 | “You did not, then, know Mrs.! young man realized the slip he had | Vane?” | made, and his face turned livid, but “Most assuredly not! I never spok”| hastily he made an effort to retrieve to the woman An my life!” There) his error. “It must haye been the was outraged diguity in the dis-| closiyg of my own door here when I [elaimer. “Not that I'am aware of | returned that muffled the shot so anything to her discredit, but I} that I did not hear it.” know nothing about her at all.” | “When you returned from where?” “What can you tell me of the| Craig leaned forward suddenly. other tenants here?” Craig asked.! That he had made such an error Griswold licked his thin lips su jo speriruic/genirnty Veer ie eee a OUGEaes Cesc iran ea | witetica the® Sordi Natllyec WON HOLGEd [frequently called, upon Mrs. Vane| Young man an fopportunity to place and at least once I have seen Miss! himself in a measure upon his guard, | Shaw issuing from her apartment.” | and his reply eame in a coldly col- Froiaure | Vanela, you ‘ean?! | “u¥ou! are, mistaken sergehnt=or Barry interposed quickly. ‘When whatever your rank may be termed. was ‘that? About three, weeks ago?” | Whatever iS ha eee” 1 Three days ago!” corrected Gris-| teh BEST Wd SRI than setTi aad wold with emphasis, “I am positive| from the Montaines,” on Bat Ninth 1 aeer ay nuetraupecnuse Mara rerely| Screstaenere: tuiadrained’and wane late at getting to my office, but on/ the earlier part of the evening the previous night I'had suffered ani” Craig turned in frank appeal te the | eeraer Ge iid Be ation! Whicht Kept el} i ress aynariettel off Ris’, collects Swans Bnd ifswas auice (10/0 clea in'| aga maueyy Femunded’ hel intel oeae the morning when I came down-! tiv, stairs and saw the Shaw girl com-| “Will you tell ts, Mr. Ladd, just pie enact He apartment ee ie exactly what did happen last. eve- Taree pee y cer ulll abt see MES: | Faayad rormetle ati fe eayou sete) 6 ane. jhouse where you dined until from CHAPTER IV Craig was so visibly dumfounded at the M eant continued in command situation. mean, Mr. Griswold, that haw had been alone in Mrs. studio Tuesday morning %” ''to those who knew him portended an important point in the examination of a witness. 0 no means’ Griswold stirred | irritably in his chair. “That serub- | Woman was there, Mrs. McGrath, who looks after some of the apart in the house, ” ou’re a widower, I understand wold?” asked Craig. fe's been dead for fourteen years, if it's any of your business!" snapped the other. “I understand that you deny. hav- | ing heard the shot—” began Craig, | but Griswold interrupted. “I have stated that-I did not. 1 was asleep until that id—Professor Semyonov clamored at my door. “You did not come down’ immedi- ately, Mr. Griswold.” Barry made his second point quietly, “What finally decided you to appear upon the scene of the murder at all?” “I did not reply to that banging upon my door because I fancied it | might be some practical joke of that young man on the second floor, Gor- {don Ladd, although I have never exchanged a word with him.” It was self-evident that nothing further could be gotten from him. In , the hall outside the officer ap proached. “The lady on the top floor, she’s been down twice asking for you,” ne observed impartially to the two. al didn't think you'd want to be dis- turbed in there, but it seems there’s something she forgot to tell you awhile back.” At that moment the pale, bobbed head of Miss Shaw appeared over the banisters two flights above and, seeing them, she came hastily and silently down, “I don’t want to waste your time, | She began a trifle breathlessly, “but something escaped my memory anid I told you an unintentional falsehood. relevant, but I do not care to have the least misunderstanding about this. When I told you that I had not entered Mrs. Vane’s studio since my call upon her until tonight it was not strictly true, although I held no communication with her, A fev days ago I was passing her door; she was out, but Mrs. McGrath was might take a peep at the portrait. “That's all right, Miss Shaw. Honest relief shone in Craig’s ey “It’s as well that you did tell us and if anything else comes to your mind, no matter how unimportant it may seem to you, just call up police head: quarters and ask for me, Sergeant | Craig, or for Sergeant Barry herc. We'll see that you're kept out of it as much as we can.” , 1 “THank you, I'm sure that you will, sergeant,” she responded with | nod that although still dignified, | was almost cordial. “Goodnight.” She vanished up the stair and as the two sergeants continued down- ward. Craig remarked confidentially to his. companion. “Ain't women funny? Did you see how her manner changed all of a sudden when she thought she had got herself in wrong? ’Twas woman’s studio after all, but it's a good thing she told*us after Gris- wold mentioned it, for we might Have gone off on some wrong track j entirely. Do we get after young | Mr. Ladd now?” “Yes,” Barry replied as they passed the tragically vacant rooms | of the dead woman. “If he knew Mrs. Vane, as Griswold says, we ought to get something worth while at last.” Gordon Ladd their ‘coming with an eagerness which he made no attempt to con- ceal, “You're headquarters men, are: | you?” he demanded. “For heav sake, come in and tell me if you've ‘found out anything! Those chaps from the local precinct are dubs, and I’m almost mad over this thing! Right this way; you'll: find cigars and things on that stand.” “You knew Mrs, Vane, Mr. Ladd?” It was more a statement than a | Question as Barry, seated himself, -“Knew her?” Good Lord, I—!” The young man controlled himself | by a visible effort and added lame- ly: “Yes, I have known her for some time, several years, in fact, and a)- though she had a host of friends, 1 think I can claim to be one of the | closest of them to her. It’s'the sheer impossibility of this thing, gentle- men, which has driven me nearly mad, I know that—that ishe was shot, I gaw her body, and yet I would be more ready to believe that @ bolt from. heaven struck her down than a bullet from a human hand!” | | i "t unexpected contradiction 6f Shaw's testimony that his fel- he asked in the different tone which | The matter is quite trivial and ir | cleaning in there and I asked if Ij no-| thing, that visit of hers to the Vane! was anticipating | | your apartment here you heard Offi- cer Boyle hammering upon the en- | trance below?” he asked in a cour- | teously persuasive tone. (Continued in Our Next Issue) | (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) } | Avoid accidents. \ Edison ithe phonograph by accident. invented | Most of us are sorry we cussed, jlast summer now. | [SS ieee aie | If prices are not too high then ;we certainly are too low. i Zobel The danger about following in father’s footsteps is you are liable jto wind. up in the cellar. One thing fine about a street car is it is warmer. crowdea i Our only favorite uplifter is the [elevator boy, | The monkey gland business is so good what a pity we can't put some jin other businesses? We would hate to live on the {moon and have to stay out all night. | Evening dresses don’t go far be- jeause they haven't much backing. i More overcoats and fewer watches are being worn this winter. | Girl basketball players make bet- ter speed in stockings beeause stock- tings have the runs in them. | Corkscrew has not lost its pull. } You must be as busy a5 a hee to keep from getting stung. Greatest man in the world is the jone who could be if you would. he of The honeymoon is over when thinks she is skinny instead slender. The price of egsg may come down. | Those keeping eggs in cold storage jare getting cold feet. Wealth is a burden—easily drop- | ped. Silence isn’t golden, it is platinura. Unehsy lies the head that lies, 1 “Start fires with care,” reads a warning. We always use kindling. It seems that a’drug on the mar- ket is not a drug on the market if it is done. North winds are going south for | the winter, but will feel much warm- er on their-way back. The bootlegger union néver strikes. You know how big a “cinder in your eve ‘feels? Well, that is how big some men in the public eye feel : By Alan T. Gol@éborough U, S. Represeftative From Maryland, First District. Of the many good stories one hears, perhaps may favorite is this: The archbishop preached a fine sermon on the beauties of married life, Two old Irish women were heard commenting on the address after the church. ee “Tis a fine sermon his riverence riage,” said . Bridget. “It. is indade,” .teplied . Maggie, “and I wisht I knew as little about the subject as he does.” | A THOUGHT | | nn cena oe J What I dé, thou knowest not now, but. thou shalt know hereafter.— John 13:7, “Why?” ‘This ‘time the question came sharply as the report of 0 pistol If upon the-outburst of nerves ‘stretched’ beyond the: break- ing point, and Gordon Ladd: cast dis- cretion to the winds. c “Because: she was alive, and well an instant almost before that shot must have been fired! I saw her wt spoke. to ay I-1”. Too ‘tate the It is, of course, much pleasanter if-one is: naturally fearless, and | envy and respect the. men who are naturally fearless, But it is a good thing to remember that the man who doss not enjoy. this advantage. can. nevertheless stand beside the man who does, and can dg his duty with like efficiency. if he chooses—Theo- dore ‘Roosevelt, Would be afther givin’ us on, mar-. = _— Oe

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