The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 21, 1923, Page 4

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‘PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! " Seon it ee eeeeae st ey ‘Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. MARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publishers CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMRER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS" The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or} DETROIT Kresge Bldg. republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| £" continuous dan as be for folk thal has led to rep in v darance corded, vise 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 Daily by carrier, per year.......... - $7.20; Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). . . oe 4.20) 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) FLORIDA MUST Citizens in every ACT | art of the nation have been aroused , by the disclosures of peonage and floggings in Florida con-_ vict camps, Which resulted from the determined effort. of | Cavalier county citizens to see that the men charged with causing the death of Martin Tabert are punished. | Mlorida is making progress. One house of the legislature has voted to abolish corporal punishment. Many leading citizens of that state sense the indignation being felt else- where, as well justice of the cry against the system in vogue in the southern state. ‘The Hand testimony of Sheriff Jones of Leon eéunty told the whole story of the supporters of the convict 1} tem. Sheriff Jones received from a lumber company for every able-bodied man he sent to the convict camp. He! sent Martin Tabert to that camp and when money came to! pay his fine he did not secure his release. $ protect- | ing his $23. With a price on the head of every man the! -heriff could secure, it can easily be seen why he was se nergetic. If he took citizens of other states and sent them is the convict camp he doubtless did the same with Florida citizens with no good reason for doing so. The Florida legislature cannot afford a “white wash.” The chicf allegations made with reference to the case of Martin Tabert have either been admitted or have been proved. | The convict lease system as practised in Florida is not | only a blot ‘against the state, but it should make all good Americans wince to realize that such a system lives in any! state. FOR THE GOOD OF THE CITY The movement inaugurated only a few years ago to make} the usual sprimg cleaning and beautifying efforts of a certain! number of citizens a civic project and to enlist a whole com-| munity in one campaign was founded on common sense. A} city cannot be beautiful unless every citizen has enough civic pride to make his premises presentable. No city can do all that it should to minimize disease and remove discomfort unless citizens generally abolish places that might be breed- ing grounds for flies and mosquitoes. The effort of the! individual is increased several fold if all of his neighbors! join with him. The week of April 30 to May 5 has been desginated clean- up and paint-up week in Bismarck. It also is Native Life week in the state, during which citizens are urged by procl mation to plant trees, shrubs and to devote time to consider ation of methods of making the state more beautiful and a more pleasant place in which to live. The community spirit of Bismarck has been growing by leaps and bounds in the last year. It is to be hoped that it} will be manifested with greater force than ever this vear. INTERESTING You should find the newspapers very interesting in the next few weeks. News runs in cycles, either a feast or a famine. Once more the so-called human race rises from its! lethargy and performs entertainingly. Three samples: Matthew Bernard Oldenburg, 64, inventor of “brick ice cream,” is buried in New Orleans. perpetual legacy. 2 The youngest bigamist on record in our country is dis-| covered in New York City. At 14 she has two husbands. | -. Kighty-year-old twin sisters, Mrs. Weis and Mrs. Von} Pelt, celebrate their birthdiy in Brooklyn. One twin often He left the world a great | lives to this advanced age, ‘but it’s phenomenal for both to!. survive that long. EINSTEIN ©, . ial ++ Prof. Camppell, of the Lick Observatory, says the photo- graphs of thefstars, taken in Australia during last Septem- | ber’s eclipse of the sun, prove that the Einstein theory is} accurate. Two other astronomical check-ups must take place ; before the Doubting Thomases of sciénce will be convinced. | Verification of the Einstein theory proves many things, | ireluding this strange fact: A yardstick does not measure the same distance north, and south as it does east and west. | Kinstein opens the way to thinking in terms of four dimen- sions. Most things that puzzle us are puzzling largely be-| cause We can “grasp” only three dimensions—length, width and depth. The fourth dimension is time. PROHIBITED \ New York City passes an ordinance prohibiting “human| flies” from climbing the sides of buildings. The “human flies” will call this an invasion of personal liberty. However, the alderman who framed this ordinance don’t care much{ what happens to the “flies.” They’re interested in protect-' ing the general public, on whose heads the “flies” are apt| to drop. The ethical and economic theory of liquor prohiBi- tion is the same. 4 GAMBLING H . The New York Stock Exchange announces that trading | in March involved the sale of 26,740,900 shares. . You find | that beaten in the March of only four previous years—1920, | 1907, 1905 and 1901. i i £ making your plans, keep an eye on the stock market.’ It anticipates (runs ahead) of general business condition by | four to six months. Speculators guess wrongly often, but! the'market itself—never. ; HOLD-UPS | y rs boy-bandit, 19, confesses to New York police that he and’ his.pals pulled off. 75 hold-ups, enough to be called | erime wave. : _* The average “crime wave” usually is the work of a hand-; £1) of individuals. They stage a lot of lawlessness and the ‘public gets the incorrect notion that a waye of crime is| ‘sprging through a large part of the population.’ “A half; dozen prison cells can end the average “crime wave.’ A BAN ON not yet r hope it never will. be the | quick and heroic trea pot Ww land go-as-you ninet was stretched to its utmost. understandable not exhibitions, who look on and in those and nery out hours is such that it th who undergo it with permanent jury. already, the justified inp Minneapolis Journal. dove of peace into the the ae trusting slumbe conferen | world, | inquiry } selves on being THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in_ thts column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here in order that may have both sides issues: which are being discussed in the pre the day, MARATHON The Marathon dancing mi eached Minneapol If there should outbreak of it here, should administer tment. persons the a sporadic authoriti To “record” ing seems about and futile a glory as could Yet it has a glitter of the dance-mad young ed efforts ceed the en alrendy re sensible in conceived, some ous cities a to « performances ein all this yele races se contests of the human endurance There is a reminiscen ar wherein While the craze of the dancers is enough, it snould permitted to produce such They are bad for those nitely worse for who par The physi is strain of dancing with- ation for sixty-fi in- If local ordinances do not thorities with sufficient Council would be w ssing such an ordinance n Lindsten rm the us Alderm proposes. WATCHFUL SUSPICION When See y Hughes bore the ms limita- tion conference it was assumeq that bird possessed the normal char istics of the species. It appears | now, however, that the American dove is a bird of somewhat picious temperament, equipped the cyes of an eagle. Instead of composing a sus- with i itself to a! , the American dove to have’ climbed into the battleship crow's nest and to hav kept un an unremitting obser upon the doves of Great Bri Japan and other participants in th ry B. Hunt The alert lookout, after scanning | T Correspondent the naval horizon. of — the | detec some smoke emerg: ing from British factories. It was deduced that the smoke indicated that the British admiralty was en zaged in a stealthy effort to elev: the guns on her warships. Without of our conferees, the n: department hurriedly asked congr for 00,000 to elevate our guns. Congress granted the approp Now Gr Britain disavoy intention to elevate her guns. W upon our all due te Washington, April 21,—Next to the] President the middle they ean di de- the chief ch ned _pea- supply urets which Harding drawer he veached with le lay when he wants exeeutive likes to hi a supply of goad old-t nut brittle. Doubtle » j his keeps loose in of his desk where st cffo flare-back to Caledoma, O., brittle w: this hoyhood ds when a stick of reckoned the tast word in tasty ¢ fections, Anyway, the appetite for peanut candy, developed at that} ‘time, has never been fully satisfied, much less outgrown: .edrning from My tee of the pr in peanut inere- overnwent proceeds with ceremony lo announce that neither shal] we raise our guns. The net results that our navy tment finds itself ddled with with no mandate on the way to spend it. Those who believe navy department will insist up- on it being returned to the taxpayers will .ph Y thee hand But, aside from the disposition of the appropriation, there is occasion for ‘grave concern over the lack of diplomacy in the origina, grant. We Americans have alway prided our- wer to lead in the th toward peace. Mutual un- standing and good faith are fun- nental to international amity. If our governmental agencies are to spend their time in arming because of vague suspicions of other nations, then the whole movement toward worldwide trust seems beset with difficulty. —Detroit News Hebert: Votaw, dent, of ‘his ins satiable peanut brittle, Mrs, Walter @. John, wife of the vecretary of thé Highway Edueation d, an expert tn home-made can- s, made up a special bateh for him, After she it prepared, she sought « fancy box, appropriate for ja gift to the White House, in which to pack it. But Mrs. Votaw demur= red. Don't fix ma’ de it up fancy,” she said “Warren will like it a lot better if vou just pack it in an old breakf: [food box full of peanut brittle sure i food box,” Which was done. ‘The breal found the place of honor in ceutive desk. As a publicist, getting advertising for his products outside the paid advertising columns, Henry Ford long ed all, contender | He Ford name and the] operstions of the Ford plant news. Having entrenched the’ flivver in the news columns, it now appears Henry may have the same sort of program up his sleeve for promoting the name and fame of the big, high- priced car he also manufactures— | the Lincoln. Anyway, when he was in Wash- lington 2 few weeks aga, he called at |the old house on Tenth street, where ‘Abraham Lincoln died. Ip this his- Htorie house 0. H. Oldroyd has built Notice is hereby given that that| up a large collection of Lincoln r certain mortgage executed and de-| lies. Congress from time to time livered by Charles H, Perkins and|has talked about taking it over Katie A. Perkins, his wife, to A. L.!1 public collection, but somehow ne nes, mortgagee, dated the 16th day | ey has seemed to find the money, of February, 1917, and filed for rec-! ford looked the collection over ord in the office of the register of /then offered Oldroyd $50,000 cash’ for deeds of the county of Burleigh in| it Oldroyd is thinking it over. He State of North Dakota, on the 19th | would like to see the collection, on day of February, 1917 and recorded which he has spent. years, go into in Book 140 of mortgages, on pase’ eovernment hands. But, frankly, the and assigned by said mortgagee | cxnense of gathering and maintain- to T, A. Helvig, by an instrument in b ae He : been he Maybe writing dated March 11th, 1917, which FSH oer pe uenne assignment was filed for record in tins | said register of deeds office on the) “4 at Panini 1oth day of March, A. D. 1917, and. The reaction? Think. this over: Sa % . Incorporations —-—_____—_—_—_ Owl Ta stock, $2 H. Holes, Brickner. Hettinger Auto Co, Hettinger; capital stock, $50,000; incorporators, M. K. Dall Hettinger; E. E. Papke, Robert Raney, Lemmon, §. D. i ar Shoe Co. Farg 000; incorporators, Westlund, B. L. Cole, I. E. Cole. 000; incorporator Cynthia Holes, James Clair F NOTICE’ OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE. Don’t Worry, The Reconcilia | This ain't no Dakota training pays quickd tion Comes In The Last Act | As turmate Srey of Iraagcar Bromus Ruvpasy tx Proce Larrea = 9 ie MES ceewice yp LETTER FROM SALLY ATHERTON TO HER FRIEND, BEATRICE GRIMSHAW. \ DEAR BEE: Your letter con of Leslie's wedding reached me on the day of Sam's and my first quar- rel. 1 had a horrible da and the newspaper accounts of the grand doings at Leslie’s wedding got on my nerves. I do not know whether it was from envy, jealousy or bodily fatigue, dear, but I could not finish that sirupy description in the Dispateh, You see, I tried Sam's advice at the office. Told Mr. Ward that I could not work after five and got snubbed for my pains. Was given the intimation that there were other typists in the world. Started home very late expecting sympathy and found a nete from Sam saying ae had gone out to the restaurant for dinner, not finding me at hom Then T saw 1 am telling you all this beeause I want to explain to you in just what mood I began to read your letter about Leslie’s wedding. You know I love beautiful things and it almost seemed to me‘as I began that description as though I had volun- tarily done myself out of something that every girl should have when | decided upon a quiet wedding. | For the first time I envied Les! I s reading the description out weeping when Sam came said something sharp and he answered in kind. ddenly it came to me that I was) making mountains out of mole hills. > at the office loud back, ‘NOW YOU KNOW WHAT THE PRESIDENT LIKE do something handsome for the Old- royd collection instead Oldroyd thinks it's worth until after the next session to But in the meantime the Henry Ford and Lineoln will hecome fixed in the public per as interchangeably now ord” and “fiw And, as stated, Henry is also mak ing Lincoln motor ears! iting see. names have mind, the Pan-American Vhis head in plexity. W going dippy? h bad? “Please say Bree The gi Building se per Or 3 in,” he said to the lorgnetted dowager who had hail- ed him for infor ion, “You “iy you it to see the fur-lined room? storage house, this is Pan-American Building.” ¥ dear man," the woman ex- pliiged, “I wish to see the fir-lined room, Eff-i-arr--Oregon fi the, -now I get anding guard’s comprehensio: room with the fan Right this we you,” light of ing on the That's the y paneling, I ple How far Woodrow Wilson is look- ing into the future may be indicated by the nt that he has ac cepted n to speak at the iWas nner of the Kan- State Democratic Club, Feb. 2 Wilson spoke before this club Feb. 1912. He was nominated and elected president later that year. Which sequence, course, may not mean anything; but there's a lot of superstition in polities and there’s a lot of seeking foy the sig- nifieanee of this announcement, both in Republican and — Demoer: circles. 29 of a\_e stevtce — | PEOPLE ee DEEPLY Bismarck, N. tor Tribune: Iam sure that the people of the state are very glad to hear that the charges of the former attendant at ha State Hospital at w not true All the people Ss INTERESTED. D., April 19, 19 of this state tutions and not least in the hospi- tal for the insane at Jamestown. For this reason we all wish our have the best in the United In 1920 Dr, Cotton of the hospital for the insane at Trenton, New J nt out statements and tistics showing that 90 per cent the patients that entered that hospi were permanently cured after having their teeth, tonsils, and other ical ‘Ms cured. y-five’ per having their cent were cured teeth attended co en proper care and rest. The entage were found in- use of stomach trouble. Because of being able to attend to these ailments and by giving them xood food and rest, the s Jersey aved annually thousands of doll being able to di a larger percentage of inmat any like institution in any s At this time (19: asked Dr, Cotton to send me i plan adopted in that state, and Dr. Cotton sent me a liberal supply o° literature with the request that 1 distribute them™.where they would do the most-good. 1 sent them to various members of the legislature, but apparently nothing was done. In these plamplets were X-ray pictures showing in some cases where a single molar chad caused insanity. At the state hospital of New Jersey a capable dentist is. kept on tl staff at all times;and one of the first examinations given a person confined there is made by him. I believe that if we were to adopt after and | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | HERE ‘ComES MR. TRLE I WANT You TO MEST HIM MR.TOONG IS THE BARITONG: You HEARD AT THE CONCERT CAST NIGHT. RS HAS A SPLENDID voice. HIS VOICG (8S ALL RIGHT, BYT UNTIL Hi TO WARBLE WITHAU'T PULLING SUCH SIS ABLE w FACES, HE SHOVLD SING ONLY For THE BUND! recorded in book 139 of Assignmenis | Will a good Republican Congress and of Mortgages on page 101, will be|# Patriotic Republican president per- foreclosed by a sale of the premises | Mit Henry Ford, ¢ t, to ob- in such mortgage and herein after; t#in pos: n, either for private or described at the front door of the/ Public purposes, of the most valu- court house at the city of Bismarck, | able collection of Lincolnia in exis‘ N. D. In the county 4f Burleigh, at;cnce? Or will Congress decide to the hour of three o'clock p.m. on the 24th of April, A. D. 1923, to sat-/ isfy the amount due pon said mort- FROM SCHOOL TO gage on the day of sale, the premises | described in such mortgage und! $1500 POSITION which will be sold to satisfy the same | are described as follows: ‘The | ; Northwest quarter of section six (6) | In less than no time R. L. Payer in Township one hundred forty-two / will ‘‘earn back’? what he paid to Nor See ray pecans vem | altend| Dakota Business College, Burleigh county, North Dakota, con-| Fargo, N. D. He was sent by the taining 153 acres, less right ay | school to a $1500-a-year position of the Northern Pacific Ry. Co. | with the Oldsmobile Service Co., There will be due on such mortgage; the very day he finished his course. at the date of sale the sunf of $1- eq Cruden, another 1). B.C 864.10, besides the cost of forecia- 3 iS eat? au reiand venle: man, went to the “2nd National Dated this 16th day of March, A. D, | Bank of Minot on his graduation 1923, : | day. F i UT. A. eine = | dividends, ‘ ssignee of Mortgage. . | E. C, RUBLn, | “Follow the Sucée$$ful.”’ Attend Attorney for Assignee of Mortgage. | the school that ‘the best firms call 4 aa 1 | 00 for office workers. Enroll any AT 2ABIAT IAS Ni onday, Write F. L. Watkins, + | Teibune Ws nt “Ady Br ng Kenuite! Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. | &¢ Jamestown | are; deeply interested in our state insti- | e of New; the plan which Dr, Cotton ko suctess fully uses that the hospital could in a few yeurs very materially lower the number of inmates, In ‘the fall of 1920 while 1 was postmistress at Bowden, a transient thresher at various times registered letters to his wife at the James- town hospital; he informed = me that he was unable to get mail ito his wife unless it was repgs- tered. I undertook to investigate why first class mail, even thougn not registered could not be delivered to the inmates and cited Mr. Coulter as having made this statement. About two weeks later his wit? was discharged, and he brought her to Bowdon, where she obtained em- ployment in a hotel. Conditions at that time were such that her teeth had not been attended to und all had to be removed. She brought with her a sample of what was given to them for butter, but putrid and unfit for human umption, much less to be given to a hospital. Her teeth ny time had as much as amined during the eight ars she was confined. Patients of x hospital should cer- jtainly be given plenty of good whole- some food, plenty of butter, milk and eggs, and there should be at all times competent dentists and phy cians to aid the superintendent that inmates may be cured and dis- ‘charged as quickly as possible. Respectful: MRS. ZORA SVENI 1009 Fifth Street. MANDAN NEWS | A home talent play, “Back to the Farm,” by the Hebron, Community club will be staged in Mandan, April 27. The organization has a mem- | bership of 175 of whom 150 are | mers living close to Hebron. A di will follow the show. ce | Atty. Joe Fleck left Thursday for Elgin, his former home, to get his car which he was forced to leave {there because of poor roads when he moved to Mandan u few weeks ago. Mrs. Harry Center left yesterday |for the Center farm near Flasher, | where Mr. and Mrs. Center will spend |the summer, | | The condition. of Jacob Froelici, | Jr:, o&Solen, who was injured a short | time'’ago when he was pinned .de- neath) @ ‘tractor, is considerably .bet- | 4 ter. Bae ue Willig: Cordes. of Cehtér, and Fred Wenger of Zap, who have been | patients ‘at the Deaconess. hospital, |were discharged. from the ‘hospital | vesterda . | i | an | Mrs. F, L, Burdick and daughter, | Harriette, and Mrs. C, E. Edquist jand daughter, Miss Helen of Man: | dan left last night for Minn | Minn. to spend a few days vis | la | C.T, Cody, who has been employed |by the Wetzstein plumbing concern lof this city has accepted a position | with a plumbing company at Port- ‘land, Ore. Mr. Cody and family left jtoday for their new home. | Summons, STATE OF NORTH. DAKOTA, COUN- ty of Burleigh. In District Court, | Fourth Judicial District. | George H. Weber, Plaintiff, vs. C. 0. | Hansen and Carolina Hansen, De- | fendants. ;The state of North Dakota to | above named defendants: | You are hereby summoned to an- swer to the complaint, in the above jentitled action which is filed in the (office of the clerk of the district {court of Burleigh county, North Da- | kota, apd to sérve a copy of your ‘answer Uffon the subscribers at their offices within thirty days after the {Service of this summons upon you, ex- ‘elusive of the day of service; and in jease of your failure to appear or an- | swer judgment will be taken against | you by default for,the relief, demand- jed in the complaint. at Dated at Washburn, North Dakgta, this 1st day of March A.-D,, 1923. * WILLIAMS & TELLEFSON, _ Attorneys for Plaintiff, Office and Postoffice Address, : Washburn, N. D. B24 MATA 2128 1 the ! Sam did not ‘understand when | sputtered over the fact that he had gone out for dinner. He was not at ning description} all pleased when I again told him that he might have started dinner and then waited for me to come. He said with a dignified air, my mother’s house the men m bers of the fami vere not called upon to do anything. We came home after a hard work to rest and immediately, by some magic, the food was set before us. We ate and by the same magic the dishes were whisked outside. “Do you remember just whit time your mother made her appear- ance after dinner?” I asked hotly. Sam wrinkled his forehead in an effort to remember. ‘Just about the time I was ready for bed if I had not gone out somewhere,” he an- swered. Then he said coldly, “Do you re- member, Sally, that part of our con- tract that each of us should do exactly as he chose? Well, I do not choose to cook.” Naturally this seemed reasonable jto me, although I laid it away back in my head for I intend to pay Mas- ter Sam back in his own coin. I Yaughed through my tears and decided not to pity myself any lon- ger even if Leslie did have a great splurge of a wedding and, dropping that Dispatch clipping into the fire, I said to Sam, “Come on, let's and take aswalk.” But (you see 1am jusing one of your “buts") I have already found out that marriage quite different from just loving. SALLY. April has $0 April Fool days, for the weather man A cynic thinks should be abolished, people The almighty mighty sente. What is s ming? * y}in swim Lie down with dogs and will get, up without much sleep, you all of it. One uplift movement everybody favors is eplifting chins. A golden wedding has gone fifty-fift s when a couple People breathe from 14 to 17 a minute, but not the minute finding a quarter, tim Insomnia cats have, seems to le what alley It is all right to call a girl a chick- en, but it doesn't help. A hypocrite is a man who uses gasoline for perfume to make people think he has an auto. A woman is a person who knows what her posteript will be hefore she starts writing a letter. A pleasant surprise is when you get a telephone number. It is unlawful to mistreat all dumb brutes except husbands, A..man has a right to get mad if he is dunned for a |, because he may have to pay the thing. | They are asking us to send our old tlothes to Europe, but many of us would get sunburned. Some of these Egyptian: dresses look good enough to eat, just like a big stick of candy. Suppose you were an enemy of the j Ohio lady who talked ten whole days without stopping. A man in San Francisco claims he has a clock 110 years old. It must be an old 15 ; (ane Be Républicans Harding's 1 cam- paign manager may. be Brown, Democrats hope he will be blue. An innocent bystander in Toledo, 0., will reeoyer. About the ‘only thing on esrth lower than the German mark right now is the German pfennig. The women are wearing gaily col- ored -shoes, and those with big feet get madder and madder. Perfumer says men will adopt watch chain powder puffs. He means males. He doesn't mean men. Seattle hen laid 365 eggs in 365 days. Poor overworked hen, she should join the bricklayers union. “Beauty Hints’—bhendline, “It cer- tainly does, All roads lead to bpmes +—-—____— | ._A THOUGHT | Every yah according as he pur- porcth ‘it’ hia heart, so let him give; not; grudgingly, or of necessity, for God, loveth a cheerful giver—II Cor. OTe se Great minds, like heaven, ure Pleased’-in doing good, though the ungrateful subjects’ of their favors are barren in return—Rowe. Every night is too long to stay out 3)

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