The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 7, 1923, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. a BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - —- —-_ Publishers Foreign Representatives. : G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - : - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, Lhe AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press i: is exciusively entitled to the use or | | republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- ! wise eredited in this paper and ¢ herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AU DIT B so the local news published REAU OF CIRCULATI SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN “ADVAD Daily by carrier, per year. 2 ar ey 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) % 7.20 L ly by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarek) wees DIVO) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota: .... 4.45.5... 600 THE § STAT vs OL DEST NEWSPAPER _ (Established 1873) STEPIN RIGHT DIRECTION News that vetoes by Governor Nestos of the legislative assembly may exceed one million dollars is good news. The action ought to have its effect not merely upon the state taxes but also upon all of the political sub- divisions of the state. Unless the state sets an example in of | tion picture EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reprod in column may or may not expres THERE’S AN END TO ALL THING \ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1928 the o Trinune. They are our of important issues which being discussed in the press of the day, A HOUSE OF MIRTH In Yonkers the oth a hu hand skipped out to parts unknown, for the present at least, He had re lated to a policeman on his beat a GOSH, | ike it ei ee J PANVARY EVERY YEAR IT's Jae SAME THING few duys before that things were not just right at his h 6, One ance of the rowing menace there con isted of a weekly beating which as administered to him = by hi wife, who clubbed him for holding t $2 a week from his customary $41 salary. Thing finally got so - a that Ui husband left and the es aN alimony As ed. The meat) of hid FeaEy ay Le SUMMER RTI AE WQS ss pur mo: | Don't Lie | familiz of u once p ntitled, Df (most ComrorTasie i PLACE | KNOW oF We , to Your Wife,” but the humor of 2 the situation seems to have disap: | oS peared entirely for the man in the —————_ cage, Doubtless he could see no harm pit in appropriating a couple ‘of dollar 'M GETTIN MADDER a week for personal hilarity. Me AN MADDER evidently had no faith in man tactics, or clse feared that such a} policy would be dangerous and un successful around his house, And so Thef led. He used good judgment. As rule it to appropriations | # | the courts would sanction even hold driving back toward the pre-war level of public expenditures | in the state it cannot expect the political sub-divisions to do so; and unless all agree upon a right policy of economy, the benefits which flow to a developing state through low taxation, which not only ease the burden of those building homes in the state but is a distinct advantage in encourag- ing immigration of farmers, will be lost. State approp ations are still far from the pr u-level, and may never reach that point again, but “revision downward” in appro- priation is encouraging. It would be unfortunate, however, if the huge interest charges needed to meet bond issues on industrial enterprises which was increased by $2,000,000 by the last legislature j ag-to the Grand Forks mill and elevator, and delinquencies on rural loans, should require such expenditures that economies felt necessary in the state must result in the fu ture in a curtailment of the educational institutions or pro- per care of departments in the state. The interest charges now amount to many hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, and in addition, the legislature created a Home Build- ing Association deficit tax and provided that an annual in- |! must terest levy be made to cover all bond sues of the future. The state is bound to pay dearly for its. experiment in socialism. FOILED! Loyal Order of American *t the Ku Klux Klan, grows by the law-of cause and effect. Avery action has an equal and contrary reaction. And an organization-for organization-against. cel each other. * —ttris possible that the Loyal Order of Americans will be- come more powerful than the Ku Klux Klan, blot the klan out of existence. Then would come a third organization, to counteract the Loyal Order of Americans. Nature has a shrewd way of keeping everything bal- anced, in the long run. The hot sun of summer evaporates water from the ocean. The vapor drifts inland, condenses, falls as rain, forms rivulets, runs into creeks, on into rivers and back into the The balance restored, the process starts over again. You see this law working in the activities of people. society-against always rises to oppose the iety-for. political party comes into power with opposition ¢ field to itself. But things soon change. Opposition sprouts up, grows until it wrests control from the old leaders. Dem- ocrats and Republicans follow each other in an eternal | cycle, though the names of the parties change as the cen- | turies slip by. organization trying te rapidly. Quite natural, Just a question of time until they can- A Nature loves a cevtain normal. She insists on it. When- ever humanity gets either above or below that normal, nature starts evening things— oring balance, equilibrium. The cycle of destruction and re tion-of what keeps men, collectively, busy from cradle to grave This natural law seems harsh to the visiond equally harsh to the conservatives. The vi spond to the water evaporating from the ocean. The con- servatives are like the rain rushing the vapor back to its | Go ions bark and dogs roar, why | source, the sea. The Law of Balance works inexorably in all human lives. When you get too happy and contented, move cautiously, for the chances are that you are “riding for a fall.” And when you are down in the mouth and everything goes wrong, keep heart, for nature soon will restore the balance and bring happiness, the reaction from misery. The sharpest razor dulls itself in shaving, and has to be sharpened again. Such is life. BOOTLEG It’s costing over 15 million dollars a year to enforce pro- hibition. his is shown by figures furnished to Congress. That’s getting off cheaply, for the nation, considering the sum that used to be rung up on the bar room cash register. | One of these days there may bea national referendum on prohibition, probably at a presidential election, though the chances are at least two-to-one against. The election would | e decided by the wets who at the last minute might change | heir.mind and vote dry. The key to liquor sentiment is in the commonly heard expression: fest of the rising generation won’t be able to get the stulf. H BEER . Nine-tenths of the alcohol drunk by the thirsty bef y prohibitfon was in beer, according to Commander Evangeline Booth. The return of ‘ per cent of prohibition. That’s something that has occurred | to few of the “liberals.” However, King Alcohol was put | eut of business on account of the other 10 per cent, which | military hansen John B. went into firewater. Minority rule. Abuse of whisky by a few brought prohibition to the millions contented with a mild drink. j i : ‘ MEAT ‘Meat eaten by Americans in 1922 was equivalent to 150 pounds for every man, woman and child. That’s more than if a pound a day for each grown-up, allowing. for babies a young children who get little or no meat. «Big meat mption indicates high national prosperity, compared oe countries. : Health ‘side ‘is debatable. ys brings into existence an | Maybe it will | ushed, the H “Glad my boy and the; ag “hold out” on your wife, but if you arried to we yourself wielde, chance to find a rolling pin suspect ing out.—Dayton News. IN MODERN SLAIN literature suffered Spanish from the ri- | LITERATURE uropean than the sid optimist. grin that overspresd | the novel in the nineteenth century From the time when the Byroni outburst that had follawed the. fail of the first revolution had eva- din tears and pistol shots to late on everything —w. rood humor, nad gentility et taste, A writer was a well-bred person in a stock who hurst no one’s feelings ind told comical stories enlivened with an occasional tear for the ben- efit. of prosperous me \ the clerks and and genre were » keynote: novels of Imost pie saved Galdos from venial fatuity of the in- sense | ROBBERY hardly THE LEEDS BANK I answered. ed and played a !no sien from the the ¢ doldrums, It took the o 7 . tire police. court docket of murder BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM ‘or other, the sile y and Junacy to wipe the smile f ea, = i omine the face of Eehe . Funnily Copyright, 1922, by EB. Phils Oppenhe'm to get ) Ginatigs WS Saas Uy r trust and Arrgt. NBA Service, Inc. Aare don to j“Remember the M th first See to the te shattered the complacent dr n of i US : order ‘and progr The jolt of the the voice hearc { i t | | | | Al { | { balance is | y anything more, please. We are! ont golfers had the matter in hand, getting so mixed up we'll soon be! ©, ou are charged,” he said acy “futomobile railed its botts.| [cMith feloniously wounding Wil- co | ‘liam Harmell, manager, and John resists me, so I was Stokes, clerk, of Brown's Bank in | just telling you,” it answered. “But/the Menwood Road, Leeds, and [Mim not so erazy as I look. Auto | with stealing from the promises [mobiles that fly have some advan-/ the sum of seven thousand pounds | i “real” beer, accordingly, would undo 90 | BOWRELLS | Ee TODAY in it up to his eyes. in MeCall We compicted our round, Th nee Just » dinne lephone. S| 1 declar Gre un absolutely certain of it,” Junch- ere came Somehow med to me »ward evening I began + we were te peaking,” disasters of the war brought a new e ' TEA fa you Norman : neration into. consciousness. This |SUR NORMAN GREYES, former- { field who drove up in}. * 1 answere ' was the famous generation of ‘8! ly of Scotland Yard, is devoting | Rvberson’s Ford and went direct | “Have you heard the new men who read German and English | hs time to tracking down the bank. The Dartier car was 1 have heard no particular und forget to go te mass. and whe|MICHAEL SAYERS, arch crimi: there, containing: net | news: since carly this morning,” | started yut everything that is go-! nal. yers is knowWn to Gre itield and Roberson, wearing a replied. i wal ing on in thought und writing in| under the alias of Stanfield,|27™y Homburg hat and a linen Stanfield escaped eleven miles | The or. “With pleas: from the sel chauffeur brought in-| from. her lection of that parti-| ply. the Inspector declar- ! 1 muttered something to the (ther huge deor swung silently open.| | Janet stood there, looking out at) me, | I freely admit that I lost my; nerve. I lost my_ poise, and with! it all the gifts which enable a man} to an exceptional — situation. For womtan showed no signs| t mental disturbance. I had, never seen her look more beauti-| ful. She moved away from the] door. | “Come in,” she invited. “I have! been expecting you.” Our footsteps awakened strange | echoes in the 1 She led the way into the sitting-room which} opened onty the terrace, and sank k on the divan, where appar-, she had been’ resting. | * she murmured. 27-1 demanded | orth “Judas! “You know, then harshly. last | you; the fools even little episode. What policemen are “He isn’t safe yet,” I muttered. | ughed moc kingly. no more about him,”) “Ib is not an equal! struggle. T wo only about my- self, alone her Alone— here! e nodded. T echoed, “Harding, our butle uffeur and confederate, has taken the r—where you can gue Our gillie broke his ‘eg this morning and has gone to hespital 1 am no’ id of burglars, but I am terri-| tied of mice, and the place is ove run with them, Also I simply! losthe the idea of having to get up and make my own coffee in the morning.” I rose to my feet. ‘ | ‘There are empty reor Dormy House,” I told here, you could obtain service made quite comfortable. ; Tam go ing back now, Shall TI bespeak one for ae you? i “You “weuld really have me, ,” she asked curiously,” under | me as your august and | be the respectable Why not?’ “The wife of a famous crimi-j |nai,’ she reminded me, ‘the wife |of the man whom you have be trayed! You and I share a secret tov, den’t we? Would you vouch) for my--respectability 2” | 1 moved a step toward here. Her were filled with a mingled! ght, a light of allurement and ciuelty, Her lips were moist and i it with anger? A withdrawn -_. Then| long arm from behind her head. jin Montana every | wrote | singing ‘fire | habit should be eas, st signs of spring in Cincinnati was when a man was caught marry- | ing tw.ce in eleven days, British rubber men trying to con trol the market should be bounced. Seeking to excel all other box ers, Jess Willard will start training at Excelsior Springs, Mo. sines aowing men that Generat Bligs says decide war of peace ignorance is not BI Philadelphia was nd prob- it. Mr, Twine of charged with being: drunk ably feels all unstrang over church paper When an actor joined the w York it up on the first page. First s'gn of spring?in the movies the report that Valen mary Winifred Hudnut Alaska radio fans heard in Cuba’ where people something tq sing about. uw woman hi Missing Texas man wired friends was in Lin Los Ang as no use in worryi h the worl!’ may have spaghetti claims. champ 'onship eating. who Italian ing | fen learned to fence Author says all women want is contentment. What clse is there to want? New Yorkers are so honest that de caught back. Nn # movie with 100 ins 300 got Snows are so heavy in some parts of Maine the trains are using cal endars for time table: 1 éorn costs Lowa rly and the to give up Using mouldy sec alone $21,000,000 First sign of spring in Tuscloosa, u, Was Whenscollege girls started correspondence school teaching a | how to make le nia man sentenced to a voice fell upon the throbb.ng | Serve three life sentences certainly lence like » douche of cold wie | has a hard. Job before him “Hands up-—like Ii _may raise marriage Ii Ll cbeyed. I recog ,/ censes to $5. Some say it is worth the man in Harding’s livery. that and some say it isn’t. Stanfield, who had crept’ in| nae eae i upon us unh | A first sign of spring anywhere “A mixtuxe of Lothario and In. | 'S,® crowd standing around a store spector Bucket!” he mocked. “Ang, “indow ful) of fishing tackle. pr to say : : ‘ BREA a ebeoeall Can Henry Ford play golf well have it over quickly,” 1 answered. , “MUs® to be president? he woman stepped between us-| jiynt the brighter thing “Don't be absurd,” she said to in today. A half dozen of Baro Michael drives in a small car to ¢ ] Rechts z, SA a Ae es novels will, probably remain}. Brown's bank in the suburb of /io the store a small order whieh Jed gloom . pisaneteumer Ne Gon ae their most solid ind. typical expres-| Leeds and robs it of over 7000 | the grocer’s as l-and}) “Escaped? Ridiculous!” I ex-| Tord to part with Sir Norman.| sion John Dos Passos in the Dial.| pounds. Stepping from the !k out. ‘The chauffeuf was tak-[claimed. aS eel ea Cg without him peat Se bank into a touring car in-which |ing advantage of the delay to fili] “He did it, anyhow. He shot Put him on parole, He is per- JANET. SOAL! Be his’ confederate, {UP With petrol. — The moment] both his guards with an automatic fectly trustwort ie i awaits him, races .| Stanfield descended from the Ford] pistol fixed in the sole of one shoe{ “You are right,” Stanfield ad- ADVENTURE OF Srotlands Lak ‘on, who and made his way to the bank, Ro {and worked with the toe of the | mitted. Take your choice,| charirelof the sinallhenn, a herson slipped off" his linen ‘dus. ]other. Mr. Gorman, frem Scotland twelve hours’ silence, or | THE TWINS rested but freed for lack’ of evi.|ter, produced a Panama hat which| Yard, is seriously wounded,. and nity.’ 3 | dence. he pulled over his eyes, and mad: Jone of the others is shot in the}, Beowsilene Ga toe ince j = Non racks Michael to{his purchases in the ‘shop. He|leg. Stanfield then threatened. the {hours,! I. promise¢ FOE aE OR ee Nee ae creel a eae MGuGesusteiG Stariiailk wena divert unt Whe ieleneer shit from| He pointed to the door. Ne non, Ale dias Mase hn ctunee under the alias cf Grover.|Ppeared, and drove the Ford away ithe handcuffs and took him to}, “I cannot have — the last few; AaVeNiaiy eats Cuchi ReMTees S dines with Mr. and. Mys_[Stanfield just stepped into the fwwithin a mile of a railway station. /hows T may ever spend with m- | Annie) mired s invited to a game of |Dartier, put on his linen duster }There he tied the man up, drove | Wife disturbed,” he said. “Kindly | Mod lnouind up ubey cu ain nate L and Homburg hat, and off} the car on himself and disapp Heave us.” feb Wien nee, tepetine .6n they started. The idea’ was tofed. So far we have no news.” |, 1 went. There was a mist be- [ieee NOW GO 0 confuse, and at first it succeeded eae fone ira vajeves/ ea clou di betoge ni) tall tne mace: chines they iil QU ENORMUANEC The whole affair was ingenious,} 1 could make no intelligible re- My brain. Rimmington was sitting on the| ing movies are a failure thus fi By J. N. Tincher Representative From venth District s. Kansas, Pace MizoUp chang this wie the), aay tan orelock cular bank, which is wickedly cffect. that Rimmington” qnd_J| Porch, smoking, when I got back | down all their savings, giving 2 eae eer “I will be in the clubhouse,” 1{lated, to the exact location to the) would come onto, the police sta- |e moved his head toward th | mortgage for the rest’ of the pur ant a ride?” offered the auto-| promised him, Dartier which made anyonc | tion the first thing’ in the morning, | Lodge. It was obvious from his! chase price. mobile Obl glngly.; ‘ “We go to bed, up here,” he re-|on the off-side almost invisible.” |Then I walked — outside little | dei jection that he tog had heard; The land agent's commission thank “ you,” ‘answered! marked, “practically with the| “It’s pretty generous of you to| giddy, sick at heart, furious with from McCall. jamounted to a considerable sum “If it's quite si sun.” let me take the credit of © this,"| myself and . T stood toward|, “What do ycu think about tak-| the fatmer’s wife objected str Safe?” laughed the. automobile. | T rose to my feet. 1 took ‘my | Rimmington remarked. the Loge until at last I yielded | ing @ look round there?” he sug- Fously to paying it. Crops were “Why, Pm just as safe as a bahoon|leave, and as I walked down the| “If Stanfield turns out to be tible impulse. “Tha eSted, jand the couple lost the place with a hole in it. Nothing could be) drive, with the yellow moon shin- | Pugsley, and Pugsley y the man the few yards of “Quite pect ” I replied terse jcececlonars: safer than. that. jing through the sparse trees, 1|believe him to be,” I said, “I shall} ‘own common, crossed the | ly. game of bil-} Years passed. Luck changed. The Nick laughed. “Mix-Up Land is! felt the ghosts of tragedy gather-| need no other reward than the joy de my way up the strag- | liards and. try and forget the whole| pair prospered. Finally they bought such a queer place don't know | ing. of having brought him to hook.” | sling: avenue and ‘rang the great | dawned busines . another farm, This time the wife what is safe and wh n't. Why! . “Do you believe him to» be] frent-door bell, — Presently | the j specified in advance that no com do you fly inste: | At five minutes to ten on the Bes hea ar cree SK i ‘ uke oe i FLIVVERING |r jon should go to body. She “Why docs the sun shine a {following morning I watched Mr. ce eaten PAE TET si z2 By Berton Braley j considered it bad luck. and the moon shine in the James Stanfield push open his pri ~ = Sannin | The lawyer who drew up the decd ‘asked. the queer automobile,|Vate gate leading onto the link EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO National Park and Cemetery | and mortgage aceceded to her re- and stroll across toward the cub- house, .I waved my hand and step-! ped back into the locker-room.| ‘Three or four men in tweeds does anything dg anything in tp Land? Why do, elephants chirp and sparrows trumpet, wh and| pYou Voun the grass blue and the sky green, |golfing outfit were waiting there. why is i [In five minutes my prospective op- a ATTIN’ CHOY, a INE rodent Nancy, put {ponent entered. In five seconds ing her hands over her cars. “Don't the handcuffs were upon _ his | Wrists, und one of the three appar- tee over automobiles that roll on! { the groun tod hould recommend you to come Do you still wish to get, with us quietly, and to reserve, for Straw's house on top of the! the present, anything you may have to say.’ !" cried both Twins! Looking at him “We want to put him out! ing a little agains: jand put King Even-teven in.’ “Then climb up and jump in,” said | Was no manner of change in the automobile. “Perhaps if you | face or expression of .my ene: guide me right, I can run into it and | He ignored the others and Joo wreek it.” at me. is your doing?” he asked. “Altogether,” I admitted. “You kne ~last night?” zame |. “It was you who reminded me rete ithat T need net take salt,” I re- as he stood lean his own lock- fer, I cou.d have sworn that there the in of glee, in scrambled | and away flew the auto- With shouts: ins, like 4 < spread ow Jp Land looked t hundred ee \ plied. (To Be Continued.) ; He nodded. ~ U4 (Copyright, 1923, NEA | “The trick is to you,” he con- fe “I am ready, gentlemen He walked quietly out to a wait- RAN! ling motorcar, with a burly police- jman on either side of him, and a With fu |Yery important man from, Scotland Rogers, | Yard in the party, Rimmington who.for many years, was a resident and L were left behind, and pre- of Bowbells, was laid to rest in the vently We essayed a round of golf. All the time my eyes kept stray.ng Bowbells cemetery, the, Ame Legion members having full charae {toward the Lodge. No sign, how- of the funeral. Mr. Rogers had the jever,, came from there. honor wihch very few: people ‘of this | “still,” Rimmington remarked, state had, that of being mccorded |28 We waited for a few minutes on the privilege of speaking with Pre-|the tenth tee, ‘don’t quite, under- sident Lincoln, |stand how you tumbled to this af- [fair so quickiy.” BBULAH COAL now 81.75 ont sats tute easy, when you per ton delivered. ‘The We-h-| once admit, the possibility of the occupants of the Dartier car being. ter Transfer Co. Phone 62. |conlcernedy™-1 plied.* “Of course; Bowbells. N, D, Mar. 7. WE'RE THS PIES, we JANITOR $ WINGY WHAT YOU VENA PLANT t We SSS PAYING (ET'S SEG WON'T PRoDUCS som P ESNANTS MGAN / WHEN \, > ON THE PIPES YPSTAICS, BuT. & DON'T PAY NO ATTENTION To “THAT. IM RUNNIN’ THIS f Fore HEAT, AND_IF You WON'T TAKE THE HINT WHEN WS POUND "LL POUND THES &, FRICTION HGaT' | How a foe was conquered—and made ; | Here, Here, under‘ the hillsides, they lie | Who did | And out of the ashes of wrath and i Vicksburg, Miss. | Here, on the hills, where they fought ; cach other, Northern comrade and Southerr: brother, Bound with death’s eternal tethet,| Soldiers valiant, they lie together. ! Uf Ly graven brass and in carven stone | Are their splendid deeds to the world | made known, How b e men battled and bled and died : On these green hills of the COU EL S| gente side, While the’ grass shall sprout and | the river runs, Their sons shall know, and sons of their sons, a Friend, In a faith, please God, that shall never end. ‘ state by state, is, their monu- ment; content not flinch at. the battle call; | With the great sky ‘arching above them. all. war, | Whatever the cuuse they were fight-| ing for, iA Nation grew from this test su- preme. The National lives—and the sun’s rays gleam | ' | on the bills where the dead forever ! dream. } | (Copyright 1923, NEA Service) | lo BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA w ‘Knowh allover the Northwest foe Quality L2MAIL US YOUR FILMS quest, and the but when she ife seemed satisfic and her husband re turned home, she found under the notarial seal these wor “My commission expires Sept. 16, 188—.” And it took the lawyer and her husband months to convince her thi something hadn't heen put over her. o—- ——______ ig oy THOUGHT Esl Then Paul answered, oe ye to weep and to break my heart? | for,1 am ready not to be hound only, bit also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus—Acts 21 When Christian’ty wakes up, and every child that belongs to, the Lord is wiJling’ to speak for him, is will- ing to work for him, and, if need be, fo die for him, then’ Christianity will advance.—Moody. HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets skin is is yellow—complexion a ie Gree in y ae ou should lake live Paes f Dr. Edi peal ga pera sub- stitute for calomel. Prepared by Dr. Edwards after ter 17 year of Ban Dr.Edwards'OliveTabletsare a pure! pound mixed withaliveo the pleasing results. ‘are sold annually at an abe

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