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{ SL PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE —"“""""_ MOND AY, MARCH 26, 1928 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ntered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. ISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - -— - Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY IICAGO - - - - - Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE A‘ SOCIATED PRE! DETROIT. The Associated Press is exciusively entitled to the use or! republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE y by carrier, per year... 4s eae .. $7.20 ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... vos 20) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... ... 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) YOUR ANCESTORS The men who make a business of tracing family tr (genealogists) report that they are in work to them cars. The war started an epidemic of interest in ancestors, espe- cially among new millionaires. The same curiosity to be greatly stimulated among what the bromidic orators call “the rank and file of the people.” A very good thing, to know where we originally came from, though scientists claim that all of us—if we trace back far enough — will find ancestors who'd be kept in the 200 today. : eS proveme | rounds coadition rht to meet the is found , Comments reproduced column may of may not express opinion of The of the day, A COMMENDABLE MOVE Kresge BIg.) rie action of count judges to her prison Pair substantial and right zen. ‘There are several phases te the quest One is the matter of cost of maintenance of prisone in the county jail who contribute a con siderable item of the al bud . of expens using these privo ers in work that sould otherwise} ssitate ouiluy of county | funds, the interests of conomy will} be served to a noteworthy extent. | An idle brain is no less a devil's | the county jail than n the ne no wo to he he health offi to excuse valid re Still worthy of note is the f are presented here our readers may have both sides important being discussed Ward count fter m ’ the « ork ! ind peraaps elsewhere and. idlene althy man. The prison. | mind if given ve employment such hardship or eruelty nd ne'er Complaint of taken offic will asualiv know when to assign to prisoner to work county son another in this Ibune, They issues which are in the press of AND RIGHT ON The mosT PRomINENT ParT oF MY PHYSIOG NOMY deciding port-terns tke use nt tin on The Nowths | rrant, is a step that roval of every thinkinge citi; ! | good for; th and sonable active | contemplated | There will be! altho th tter he state | ment do well class will | ider anything like an outrage and an} are] 0 considerstion. | including thet such nd whent o there will be no| sentimentality. | of the matter 1 that kno THE BOOTLEGGERS’ MASTERPIECE | peas ledge of the system will undoubt | . . . ed streng } ca of > Na Hl Americans seem to have an aversion to pedigrees of peo- ne ‘ ee as cues aw i "| ple, though intensely interested in the lineage of livestock, ),est. 1 prospect of ‘a period of | dogs, cats, race horses and machinery. juetivity with pick and shovel and, This is natural, since our national attitude is that what | wheel barrow tinszead of case and really counts is what you are today, not what you were yes-,[VNNAr Des the ia WU ga ; A ‘ i Dn hard-boiled ¢ 0 terday or your ancestors in the past. A man stands on his! junning atk Ae Uk Dee own legs, not some one else’s, in democracy. cohort and will ex word to 5 “Thad all about her,” However, each of us is the result of a long stream of gen-j pass among the w: ing fratern | I replied nda ly. crations of toiling people whose foremost motive was to pro-| iy to His fli j at beh an THE UN AMILIAR tes UU lbae ede iis hast gy duce a child better in character and more successful than its Ha eau ee ne eat ¢ and, identally, the coutty a) al | abo s mich do, I'v parents. ee ae ? treasurer well TRIANGLE of used to taking stock of people's We owe it to our toiling ancestors to give them at least) The Fair Board plans to ultimate expressions, and the way she look- ng curiosity. ly make the fair grounds as mien BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEI Jed at you was rex! mean.” Intensely interesting is tracing back your family tree.|of # park as possole, beautifying it be eon by E.Phillips 0} heim Fs ages 5 2 5 vith treas limndl chris mipiise: ilGts opyrig 22, by E Phillips Oppenhe 1 Nothing beats it as an enjolable diversion. If you want to i eens ay me i ae pice LO y eee aa the : wane. fand flewe sand climbin Os ay serait rf start, the local library can tell you how to go about it. Try! <5 that it Ne teamieenittet ents ovee Sebvicean 1 on the way to my cabin, to find out something about the man and woman of several |ditrerent from the familiar old col- alcurious ¢cseation of con centuries ago, from whom you are descended. In most |lection of ramshackle frame build} cee ATO Te h : None und the eee Lae a ee cases, it’s difficult work. (ings, delapidated fences, patches of | Vendetta oe ULE Pelee Ses a eat eae eee tae . “4 < ‘ . ‘ j e: nite: é fat ehh TA NUMM. wwe ty Psame woman ensconced in a corner | very nely doin In tracing your family tree, youll run into surprises, |UrKempt weed é eu eerie land) Yara, when Sayeis beaut of the tender which was to take us| with a Fhe totinenmse akcune And : levwilleandstantily sithnieinevaws jetrewn spaces) kteow, to) so many, f : trou Yhe steamer. She serowled | her + oked at me with stead nd most people will find family skeletons that they will not) fairs. The unfortunate gen F [ neuseniaid, antsy > at hack, to the steamer, She se as en an Rooker uy pe eeaey care to circulate. For instance, many of the early settlers |who toil in the good work of causing | 22 NOTREE YY > aa Sy MR Ane sees ee i ied ON ee a Nbeat of America were fugitiv from European courts, though | the tyansformation of The North. | °°") aden ‘ ae year s : i 2 H % comes ang aise, L walked to ving things abeut me, and J Was some of their descendants claim blue blood. [yest hei grounds from the present | °"\) apaues aenacnyt he A friend of ours stopped his researches when he traced | {joorh® Se usdene tens a cause by “Have 1 offended you in any way?" sats i Ths Sit a himself back to a man who was recorded by pen and ink iN|¢hcir time is well spent and can look AMEE) “ ig eas Seen ease these words : jUpon the beautified spot as seme She looked at me 1 was sorry Cor the question di “May 15, 1652—Resolved, by the Amsterdam, Holland, jthing of a monument to themselve ‘ace, whieh normaily must the words had left my lips chamber of the West India Company, that Adriaen J———. | : a wv) Piel as to tb. really soft ar pretty, had become hard ihe is ton ina a ve bis P54 of the shi aha aniGle 4 aia hav. | feeling much the: way, however cold. deathly pale. and if Dks pilot of the ship, the ¢ ou of Cleef. be not molested for hav-| ward County Independent he again resumes command of hi oul are Janet Stanfield, are you} could have killed: 1 should haye been mg accidently shot his captain in 16: dangerous gang of criminals, J. not?” she as dead woman. She made no answer re gang Adriaen’s blood, by the way, flows tod leading society families of New York City. y in several of the; The carly records of Americans are rapidy disappearing, |" 6 Mutt a battered old telephor If you want to leave aj"? buried by time like everything else. family tree for your descendants, better get busy. Rodger Dolan now has $1500 invested in his radio, He} keeps adding to it, though the outfit already looks like the, inside of an electrical goods shop. \ Dolan writes: ’m getting the concerts fine. I get them aliaand usually all at the same time, piled on top of each, other.” Though discouraged because he is unable to develop a “tuning sense,” Dolan will continue with his radio. He's. wise. Radio is the toy of youth. Nothing equals it for keep- sing mature people young in heart, up to the times. The man husiness without tie telephone, Some idea of i radio will waken presently. CANCER Jancer is especially likely to attack constitutionally strong and healthy people, according to a popular notion. And you find the same idea of many medical books of stand- ing. The truth is this: Cancer and tuberculosis tend to attack persons who are constitutionally weak. So announces Dr. Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins, after sthdying the life! histories of 100,000 residents of Baltimore. Live sensibly, keep the body’s general health good by splenty of fresh air, exercise, pure food, sleep and healthful thinking. Then almost any disease will have a hard time “getting” you. Better than guarding against individual dis- eases. without < SUPPLIES A soldier at the battlefront requires 30 pounds of food and allied suvplies a day, army experts figure. For a million men, 30 million pounds of food and stores daily. This em-| phasizes how transportation is needed wherever men congre- gate in large numbers. Peace time included. For instance, the railroads move 40,000 pounds of paid freight a year for each of us, or about 110 pounds a day. In addition are deliveries hy wagon and motor truck. Conservative guess would be that it requires the movement of 200 pounds of food, coal, building materials, etc., each day for each of us, to keep our civilization moving. FIRES We have an average of 35,500 forest fires a year, or about 92 a day, in the United States. Uncle Sam, announcing this, also says that more than seven million acres of forests go up tin smoke each year. You cannot impress too indelibly, on the minds of your ichildren, that fire is the most dangerous force used by man. |: Nearly all fires, ‘excepting ones started by lightning or} spontaneous combustion, are due to carlessness somewhere | élong the lire. ° bia HELP *'* Since 1914, America has loaned the rest of the world 21\ hillion dollars, or about $200 for each of us. Since the Armistice we have been handing out a billion ayear. The tide of loans is rising again. Foreign national governments, provinces, cities and cor- porations have shared these loans. And still they call us fight-fisted? That’s nearly always the wail of the borrower. 5 want—the whole United States ?, Se lone a pr to NATION OF TALKERS Somewhat tired of the game, grad, “That ts certainly my name,” [fat all. 1 waited for a moment and Avfew days ago Jeff tried to palm| ually awakens to the fact that Mich-fndmitted, more puzzled than ever, J then passed (on to my” stateroom, acl is a hard taskmaker. She com-{) She lo tie in doubting igo 1 authentic relic from the tomb | bates him with Sir Norman Greyes. een your picture,” | It must have heen about ten | 6b Muleankneameny lithe. inverted near as 1 can ren ember weluck that night when® 1 heard achronis ay be amusing, but it}! ® COPY of the _letter By rc H , soft npn b my, doar, T guessed More UIRCTikak: Te sueeaig rahe PUnMe wondekful third daiy)iof : ew York, He carried it with [at once who it was, and [ guessed nesUlNELen he Lo JuRe. Now, wich oul ee tomnte Inenempy ou RNeU gare oe rightly, Tt was) Mrs Mar- contempa isation, in ali | ee Will, of the. late William ae : Un, weapped ina dress pwn and Atala He ee ay a er, of Mayford, Surre She turned deliberately away, as | with stippers on her feet. She clos- Lbs Meta enum Tents, seoul sy e entitled toa le of though mined not to enter in- [ed the door , and she put Ey overnight avevcry | “telephio) nds Stealing free of dut to any. further conversation. — T to} were to be demolished or somehow] As the estate is so smail, and the | found her undociability to some ex eliminated. No doubt we would! assets are chiefly in War Loan, we | tent a relief, but when T stepped on ny e€ one way or another untit! are in a position to pay you that | board again, my blessed peace of omeone invented something “just! sum at once, if you will favor us {mind was gone. I relapsed into m s good.” But for a time at least} with a callor your instructions. | former frame of mind and ende almost all businss would come to a] Faithfully, ored to keep away from everyone. “He marri standstill at hest hobble alone Haskel & Hame: Mr. Popple, however, refuse to ac-| she reptie! like a paralytic. It is really hard : a great deal of considera- | cept my plain hints. Me dragged his | either of us.” to imagine the conduct of modern{ firs passage to | chair over to my ner on de I turned away from her, that she suggested just published by the Mlinoi mittee on public f there in use in this country, over 000,000,000 telephone | versations were held, or an average | In 1 phone which of 176 for each pezson in the United! Snine, the salt air, the complete = Sta Ss e “ cepti 1 a: eteceans & tate ‘ome conception of the! Change, did their work, I made some FIFTH HELPING To DRY equipment ary may be gained] slight change in my toilet one night, from the fact that enough wire were in use in | two double earth enough the thirds of world a 1000 here © sone NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Notice n_ instrument dated December 8. recorded in the and | regi nt ich mor state of North Dakota, at the honr of|, We somehow or other found | [27 eee ate ee ee tree] places at a table. My immediate | | nd Riel Pinel Dal wire to the left continent all over the telephones in the ninety x We must certain] be a nation of talkers.--Philadel phi: e150; ter of deeds on the December, 7 ‘ gage and herei’ eribed at the front door a! ihouse in the county of Burleigh hi mortgage on the : le, . The premises deseribed in such orteage and which will Hundr {Range Seventy Six (76), according to the Government | thereof 160 ‘There will he due ange at the date of sale th acres mo! hty Seven Cents (1 and interest, and nder the morten re, of foreclosure and . Dated March i Assignee of Mortgages. Zuger & Tillotean Attorneva for Assignee. Bismarck, N. 1D. Janet he ‘deals Yenientis Alter the Leeds ban robbery crs is forces to flee the country, Re tugning to England at a later “Mrs. Louisa K. lady’s name Martin—t he informed me..“S name of Janet P. & O. hoa e ins the on the slowe ction s widespread use is! table of statistics|! could find. I spent a moderate | comes from way out West, heyond rowing upon me to wtics) Sum in replenishing my wardrobe, | Milwaukee. She is xettiye out at i ¢ utility information, | sewed a hundred pound note in my | Marseill man,” Louisa Were 11,300,000. tele, | bodice, and started on my adven-, J. sei Coy Oe ny ‘Then the natural thing happened. My interest. in life began to revive. I was young and strong. The sun- con | BY | EVERETT TRUE miles of 2 to run six circuits,from the, moon and still have| to stretch across; thirty times. Two- the | In| telephone far} ; in 1921 there eight persons. and arranged my hair differently: Half a dizen people made an excuse to come and talk to me that night on neck, I had as many offers of an escort to view the sights when we landed at Gibraltar on the follow- ing day. Men, however, made no ap- peal to me. I preferred to join a mall party, mostly composed of people who sat at my table. We wandered about the place in the usual disjointed fashion, striv ing to assume the tourist intelli- gent interests in the jumble of Spanish remains, modern fortific tions, burnous-clad Moors gnd_pre- i ternaturally withered Spaniards. Finally we wandered into the ho- tel for tea, served in a lounge which one of my traveled companions des- eribed the very quintessence. of spjrious Orientalikm. I was steep- | ed in amazement at something I saw in the face of the woman who had, been its sditary occupant — before our coming.” She was moderately ‘oung, quietly but expensively dress d. of small but graceful firure and with large dark eyes. She was glay- ing at me with an expression of in- tent and deliberate “malignity. To the best of my belief I had never eon her before. ~_HIS HANPS,~ in United States, one ev Bulletin. given that that puted and de- | n and Kate} e Rot: mort, am, if Novembe: and assigned by Catherine. C! THESE to office of 24 nm ufter des. the court | FACE \ Neighbor was an elderly | American a in such! gentleman who had onee #t twice pe fold 19] snoken to me on the voyage. bit 0 seemed to spend most of his t'me seeking former buiness nsso- nates, His mame was Frank Pop- an or less, an stich are you acquainted with the in the corner \ he asked curi- wr head, “I have never seen her before.” I assured him. “To thet eo he rentied ineratn. notice her look- ole 7 notd hoxides the costa | er AN PNET & \’ athena Ctoacy N Mina of fiowne®? Q Preveht cha had neahal Uy, coi keh anapsteineitee alent WARM. I received a further shock about 3 ‘ 2-19-26-4-2-9 f should not see the Martin hate in my face. this sort had late. of When two women love the same continued, CONDO ARS PsceR TOWELS — Noy GERMAN MARKS I Vi=h Nea déavice’ \ should forget ever: ‘he is in danger. I don't sec lov your went on. why are you here? : “I see no reason why I should dis- cuss that or way other subject with you,” 1 answered, “But as a mat-, ter of fact [ had no idea that Mich- ything when in acl was in Marseilles. I thought that she would have struck me, The fire of —unbelic! blazed in her eyes. What are you teamer then?” sh “Peame for a ho She leaned a Ettle towsdrd me. In the unshaded Iht of the fuce scemed wan, almost a ” she si his is a mat- death some in Marseilles. pr Michac onc of his be- Tell me through ter of jife *t iden he swear that Thad no was there.” “You fool vou that lewed—that of you?” are yonrself,” 1 eed see you the pe in the same reminded her. position am not,” she assured “Twas born in Mar: led there repeat- corner and stone of the place. It was | who taught Michzel that it was the finest hid- z place in the world for the edu- criminal. It was I who took him where he is now.” Our conversat.on was suddenly in- terrupted in a very unexpected “ash- ien. My stewardess entered, with a thin blue strip in her hand. “Wireless for you, Mrs. she ounced, addressing me by the name under which I had booked my “For me?” [ repeated incredutous- ly. There must t some mistak Nebody knows that I am on board “It's Mrs. Soale, right enough the stewardess assured me, “There's no one else of that name among the passengers.” I tore open the envelope. My com- panicn watched me tering She could scarcely wait until stewardes had departed. she raged. “You see done! You have laid F 1 for the police to follow from Lendon to Marseilles.” She poured out abuse. I heard nothing. My whole attention was fixed upon these few words staring eye the at 9 ‘om the telegraph for “Dombey 31st March — Genesis Louise.” I felt her wrist suddenly grip mine. She rend the message over my shoulder. the code.” she whispered ly. “Quick! ! “What code?” I demanded. “I doen't know what you're talking about.” I suppose she must have been con- vinced at last. for she dropped my {wrist and hurried to the door, (Continued in Our Next Issuc) | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS y Olive Barton Roberts gar-Plum Land was full of good {things ‘The road was made of fudge,’ |the stones were rock-candy, the fences the trees we with all sorts of | fruit Or 1 them, tree had iee eream cones on! nother tree grew nothing but, jsundacs—all sorts ‘of sundaes, hot | fudge sundaes, marshmallow sun-! jdaes, maple-nut sundaes, tutti-frutti | Mexican sundaes, — b: ttle | banana-gplit sundaes, | strawberry sundaes and every other | jkind of sundaes that ever gs jt boy or girl indigestion, | Another grew peanuts striped pape another pop-c (balls done up in red tissue paper. An- cther tree grew ice cream sodas with two straws in each, while still an other tree bore boxes of cracker jack | and glasses of pink lemons | their to the *s house, Nancy and rit, , sundaes, shiu sun Cut-Out Nick got 1 we have, Nick?” said y. “An ice cream cone, a sun-{ dae, cr a ball of pop-corn?” “Pop-corn!” said Nick, So he climbed the pop-corn tree} and broke off two nice round rea tiscue-paper balls. The pop-corn fresh and sticky and disappeared down two little red throats like magic “Now, V'm thi said Nancy “Then we'll have some soda!” said | Nick. Nancy took vanilla and Nick! teok raspberry-—and that was that. ‘ow I'm thirsty,” said Nancy | Now I’m hungry again,” said om I!” daclared Nancy, | So they had « sundae apiece with! 10 things on it. H And then, being thirsty again, they | had some pop. ! “Now, let's go on!” said Nick. “Yes,| let's,” said Nancy looking a little} pale. : | | But what do you thigk? They had} lost their way. The sign on the road pointed ‘to Castor Land one way and to Plaster Land the other way. | Wasn't it dreadful! | The Twins sat down to think what! it would be best to do. (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) \iwli wt! jemfw shr etao shrd dlunn| sla is ‘| A THOUGHT || Remove far from! me. vanity and ies; give me neither ‘poverty nor riches; feed me with food conven- ient for me-—Prov. 30:8. It,As far more difficult to be sim- [ple than to be ‘tomplicated; far more difficult to sacrifice skill and | cease exertion in the proper place, | than to expend both indiscriminate- | ly.—Ruskin. wiewed. | afterncon, | cipal, lewt Saturday for Philadelphi Von Hind. nburg aneticr says and anus which towns was not gressmen Windstorm destroye,| sev eral south ed by returning At last Dempsey will Tat it took a lot to make him mad. ‘ The former kaiser has a new grandson and you can congratalate the little boy on his nerve. Apri} is coming. April is the month that makes ducks happy Texas singer has broken into erand opera because she is high ton ed. Pittsburg jail has a radio. Ret weather reports and time — signals make the prisoners mad. Porch swing and bicycle makers hope gasoline docs go to a dollar, Babe Ruth is in trouble ‘agin, It is a sure sign of spring. Kentucky isn't what it It took five to shoot a cop. once was The national balloon race for 19: H ed off, not, how hot air. A Georgia farmer tells us his cattle have more ticks than a cou ple a? eight-day clocks. The girl of (1923 hardly has a stitch on her back because most of is pinned on. Too many of the trials of being a movie actor are held in court. The average wife is raising two or three children and a husband. You are not getting ,old until you hate to wear a new suit “Home, Sweet Home” was writ- ten 100 years ago, but if you are away you can write it every day. The meanest boy in our neighbor hood licks a chocolate bar all over so you won't ask him for any. One thing worse than having a job as a wife is being a dressmaker and always having sewing to do. In the wilds of Mexico they hunt lions with autos, perhaps because pedestrians are so scarce. An alligator of the*Cincinnati zoo has lived 125 years without any © whatever, Since a Philadelphia — preacher vs there is no hell maybe he can tel] us what summer is as hot as. People who have stepped at hotels may be glad to learn a bis : burned in Pittsburg. ‘oman shot a neighbor for listening in on the telephone, but all af us can't do that. chers is Serious shortage of pre: reported in Montana, preacher shortage is in their pockets. The Chinese women norant, but most of th: to get married before the may be ig- manage reach 15 turning point in a man’s may be where the worm Our kick against human nature is it isn’t always human. Hope boiled ham and cabbage nev- er get a divorce. | MANDAN NEWS | vester, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.J, Sylvester, who is attending the Minnesota universi! arrived Saturday to spend the Easter vaca- tion with his parents. 2 i Mrs, Joseph F, Maitland was cho: to head the Presbyterian Ludjes Aid society for the ensuing year at the regular meeting held on Thurs. Mrs. J. F, Williams named vice president; Mrs. H. now, second vice president; M car Zeamer, secretary, and Mrs. L. Lyman, treasurer. Members of .the basketball _ and football and the girls. basketball teams of the Mandan “high school which have gained so many victories and made sach splendid records in the past seagon were guests of honor of the student body Friday evening at high school. The banquet was held in the gym- nasium and was attended by about 150 pupils and teachers. Supt. C. L. Love acted as toastmaster. Joseph Bergeim, high school prin- Pa., where he was called by the ser ous illness of his mother. banquet and reception held at the »