The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 28, 1923, Page 4

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PAGEFOUR ie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, MAY 28, 1923 THE BISMARCK TRLBUN Ua = ————————_ L entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N, D., as Second Class tt Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - _—-_—-_-Publishers| Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT Marquétte Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | H PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. ee — e : MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATE) PRESS _:The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- ti wise credited in this paper and also the local news published iy herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are © also reserved. Ge MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION 4 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE mp Daily by carrier, per year.... Rip sie civ cieie cle sie cote spt Ee. hig Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... . see 7.20 | ve Waily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . 6.00 | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER a (Established 1873) or SHOULD ACCEPT OFFER 1 ., Judge Jansonius’ opinion clears up the county bond issue su matter. He finds that no contract has been entered into and at the commission can still accept better offers for the bonds if any are submitted. SNUBBED copyniewt rata By Rex BEACH ‘PRUAED BY ARLANOLMEUT WATH HETROOUTAN MPREDAPER SeQvICR, HW youn, Young men wishing to stay sing in June just eat onions, chew tobac co, and no auto, BEGIN HERE TODAY igive up his rooms. The Texan was Calvin Gray, sworn enemy of, bewildered; he could not understand Colonel Henry Nelson, is living inj the re n for such a request. Dallas at the most.expensive hotel,4 “ ‘Ain't 1 paid my bills?” he Gray falls in love with Barbara | queried. Parker, who buys land for Nelson.| The manager assured him that he |The Briskow family, friends o%| had; he was profoundly regretful, | Gray, goes ‘to the mountains, wherg|as a matter of fact but it so | Allie, the daughter, has a tutor and| pened that the Briskow suite hid ja dancing master. Attracted by her| been reserved early in the season, | money and her physical charms the and the party who made the reservi- | dancing teacher kissess Allie. En-| tion had just wired that he was ar- ‘raged at his advances the girl) riving that di te was a gentle: |throws the professor out of a win-| man of importance—it was indeed | dow. He lands in a béd of thorns.|unfortunate—the management y Ring the tutor, resolves to|preciated Mr. Briskow's patronagg n. Allie is in love with Gray.| they hoped he and his family would | NOW GO ON WITH STORY, return to the Notch sometime. | “She chucked the dancin‘ teacher} “Mebbe you got some other rooms out of a window?” he repeuted,|that would do us,” Gus ventured blankly. “What. for?” It was too bad, but the hotel was “Goodness knows. Mr. Briskow!| overcrowded. Later, perhaps: - Something he said, or did—I could-] Now at thgt very moment — the int make out precively. I found her|lobby was filled with tournament in a dreadful state, and I tried to] golfers who were leaving .on the comfort her, I did really, but--oh! | morning train, and Briskow knew it. If you could have heard her! Where|He studied the speaker with an ex- she learned such language, 1 don't| pressi ed the latter ex Here’s news from Canada On-t tario firebug who set 38 fires was sent to jail to set ten yeurs. | A suitable costume to wear while calling on a widow in June is a base- ball mask and straightjacket. Ambassador Harvey brought 20 trunks from England, without a leak. | ‘Tell a girl how cold your feet stay | on winter nights, It may save you | from marrying. u Imon, new congressman from essee, is no poor fish When a female of t a male to be her brother she m become her brother's keeper. More news from Canad Onta cow attacked a train, so now her :; E. B. Cox, attorney for the petitioners, stated that he} a had an offer for the bonds at a lower figure than was sub-| mlitted by the Minneapolis bond house. If there can be any ev saving effected the taxpayers, the county commissioners certainly should avail themselves of the opportunity. | The Tribune stated in a previous editorial that in its! opinion there was no fraud on the part of the county com- ivi mission and the only criticism that might arise was too hasty re’ action upon a matter of such importance. | Now that the way is clear, it would be the better part of Wisdom to call for bids and ascertain the best possible figure. This would satisfy the taxpayers of the county and leave no hrs room for critici Twenty years ago Forest Butner found himself swamped , with debts in his old home town, Lexington, Ky. “Some day ue TH come back and pay you in full, with interest,” he told his bn 14 creditors. | a] OLD HOME TOWN it » The years slipped by. In the memories of the 14, Butner | a became a sue phantom, seldom intruding on their atten-| , tion. re , ie The other night the 14 were invited to attend a banquet as a guests of a mysterious stranger. The mysterious stranger, | 1 of course, was Butner—now a wealthy Oregon fruit growe To each of his old creditors he handed an envelope contain- q ing a check in full for the old debts with compound interest | ta to date. aw “Tam supremely happy for the first time in years,” Butner ee is quoted as saying when he took the train back west. Any of us would be, returning in triumph to the old home | « town under similar circumstances. hi = he At this time of year, your memory turns back to the com- =m munity in which you spent your youth. You yearn to return, | x If you go, you come back rather disappointed and disillu- or Sioned. You found the pump closer to the house, and all} rv other distances similarly shortened, compared with the pic- | "0%: but maybe distances are pretty 2 ture you carried in memory. Probably, as the train neared know. My irs burn! But that} treme di it was much the Fisn't the worst; you should hear| same expression he had worn the at—* {night before when he had served “He must of saia something pretty | Warning upon Delamater. lewdow’ HeeRowcenokestuletiy: || 10 with a heavy heart and a his bright blue eyes were hard. “I| heavy tread that Briskow returned iGuWOntanetnell cite: |to his room. Ma took the announce- You ‘don't. understand,” chatter-| ment like a death blow, for it meant ed the woman. “She flung the man/the end of all her dreams, all her | bodily out of the window and into aj joyous games of “pretend.” Her hed of thorns. It nearly killed him; | mountains those clean, — greeny {he was painfully lacerated andj friendly mountains that she loved bruised and--Right in the middle of | With a passion so intense that she a golf game! It did something| fairly ached—those and her caves, | dreadful—I don't) know what—just | her waterfalls, her gypsy band, were as the world's champion caught the! to be taken from her, She was to be ‘ball or something. banished, exiled, “If he's crippled FH get him that} As for Allie, she told herself that said Briskow, and at/this was the end. She had tried) to ssion upon his] make something of her self and had beaten face Mrs, Ring ut-| failed, She had crucified hergelf faint. bleat of terror. She| she had bled her body and scSurged it him as he undertook to|her soul only to gain ridicule and ‘ disgrace. There was no use of try , my heavens! What are you| ing further; Gray had been mi going to do?” in her, and her misery, her shame “Depends on what hersaid to Al-|#t the realization was ntolerable, cing him, after this Allie decided to do away with hye, owner steak daily. a strange girl Hing how girl nay act. When you call, and she removes her earrings so they will not be in the way, you are liable to be a June groom, Wa tle have je on reports shaw very lit: except among those who H rainst haireuts, se barbers will be use of David buneh 1s ft ekled if they get jailed. | much the pu weathe! i News of Our H omen are people whe are always : ‘ ething. ow, an insurance Neighbors firm call them too reckle: WILD ROS Mr. Koosenny arrived Thursday for visit with his er, Mi Aleck Jauaski. ken A row of thumb ta trouser seams will protect them fr being sat upon. FROM BEATRIC Li We must also share it usually and Mrs. Marshall Dralle of! SHAW ‘TO HER NEWL French ace wed a queen with jack | yp, The woman wrung her hands. | with the one we love the most, with | wy A ies mele and may live like a king, or poker aS Siti nent. Si Sa athine pera Hed 4 : w people! What—savages! . sl AR chas race oeavellmindetiave: isteneanibel as Es Ly SU AL SLIE the one’ who is most fEvoted to us. | youre going to shoot him, I sup- CHAPTER XV the Lloyd Gosney family. ‘oT’ | {f we could only think of this when | 1.6. just because—" A Friend in Need 7 ; i we were playing with fire it would | ay .oyyen 6y, ; ic pia aaa Take two auto licenses. Place end | Mr, and Mrs. Sam Gooding and| | wonder if you know, dear Leslic,! yo, aie ceeds Saumiitiy oka Yes'm!” the father nodded. “You! Gus Briskow was waiting at the to end. Now, they look like recent | Elen Pe Gael wibikE ithe Bei : costo te ee : S| got it right, motif an‘ all. ‘Just be- hier’s desk for his bill when the » they len Peterson were visitors at the! what terrible thing has come to] jo are more or less adventurous, — j : 4 | big league baseball scores. | Brownawell home Sunday evening. | ¢ ee ites hy Be hen one | cHUse bustle of incoming guests told . | One can’ be very happy when one} «put it's murder! You—you can't} him that — the morning — train an-ever suffer) moan it’? Moans issued from thejhad — arrived. Probably it had cing someone | spouker. “What ever possessed me] brought that “gentleman of impor- thing to is alone, but no one disgrace without disg: Aris lard makes it slide off another nose | school. 1 absent from ount of sick Greasing a wart on the nose with an that went Sally knew always b ent on periodteal y on al e to suggest a to accept th sition? It’s en-| tance” to wh th anager Q. slic verging eae! s : 0 necept this position? It’s unen ‘0 whom the manager had re- lick as everything, ne : this, teo, and one of the 4 ie, but Tam quite male bediavoleeade=? feces G TE BSCS TAG WHAELigatNeieuceriuan. | Mrs cOlatiahellicimpianavisttingiinon ayy: te ie noe eve une er y “never hav- aw your last. raise, Mi Briskow's chain of thought was dits were holding sugar for a ransom | With her daughter, Mrs, John Pe- E Sere ONO ter heen married before, | Drakenjibya ainpacii cheuiael anit of eral million | terson who has been ill for some eave neat H nS eeNe) forgotten that anyone needs money} “ho you think I'd s\ after this?| nearly drove him through the | time. that she didn’t, for she is] but himself as long as 41e provides : bad enough to be made ridicu- shier’s window; then by a loud everything else liberall. s—the whole hotel is in laughter; |cheery greeting. The next moment ‘ Why don't you have a real talk | jaughter at me, I dare say, as much|he found himself actually embrace. y ter prohibi-| with Jackand explain that to know at her. Imagine! Hurling a full-|by—Gus could not believe his cyes* grade exam-| tion, Sam would not be able to getf one js absolutely penniless is a} grown man from a window.” by Calvin Gray! obliged to s tt both her husband If. Seattle street car fare is a line | Helen Brow aamall isn ataging aac anne the H. A. Carlisle home this week Sally thought that, aking the eight long jn Seattle, 4 the old home town, a thrill went through you. You jumped. this gune moon you hear about is at School N (ae Beth A Soe UB ce areal dealliee RS ental r don’t hear nobody laughing”) | et ! ee precious pirate! My, " ee SRDS NAYS | : i So o¢ e ecks | Above all things else, Leslie, don i vy swung his hea ly q 5 rn d off, looked eagerly about for familiar faces. i the honeymoon, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Briggs who! ago he sot miething that! jae Just: the Rhee day a young At ade ius tees ow vaston! fe eae 4 tose yee) Mavend:Allie he Alas, the faces were strange, except that the star pupil of ne A eas | live south of E aaa mere pedis vison | st letter she | Woman who has been unfortunate in ing directly to the desk, he|otherWise he:§ Great place, isn't it? your school days might be found driving a hack or loading ,,/°\7 S16 Mnort umone hates us at the H. A. Carlisle home Sunday. | told me she thought he had Jost his} her marriage made me a rather|asked for the menager then stood| Nothing in this country or Burope milk cans and trunks and barrels and crates on the trains. | tourists, but she would jus the | wbeliyattoe nelle ConUaaNTraarnl es eee he was a Yittle hara | Patbetic confession. She said, “Do | aside, hat in hand, until the latter| that compares with it, and I've sent Maybe you’ve had this experience. Most of us have.! rest of ‘us. Mrs. Harold Brownawell, who is re- rewas a Tittle hard! you know, if [ had known what 1| made his app: e. The manager] dozens of my friends here. [ came a x ie 5 Maybe, too, you found only a few old-time friends when you | ~ ¢ombed the town, and even they had to be prompted before ! a they could place you. Despite all this, each spring brings a is = desire to go back to the old associations of boyhood. a And life has few satisfactions greater than to return hon- | orably and in triumph, like the Oregon fruit grower. This universal interest in the community where we spent our youth is the psychological explanation of the popularity of Lee Stanley’s famous comic strip, “The Old Home Town.” When we return there, we learn that old friends have died or scattered to the far corners of the earth, old land- marks torn down. It’s like exploring a strange world with | only the scenery seeming familiar. | The Old Home Town, friends, is gone in fact. But it lives | on in memory, a memory we wouldn’t trade for a pot, of , money. After all, despite its joy being mellowed by a tduch | of sadness, memory is our greatest possession, also our only permanent one. i in el SS Bs 9) BREAD | Bakers have been running a big national campaign to in- duce us to eat more bread. They say bread eating by Amer- icans has fallen off a fourth. If each of us ate one more slice of bread a day, it would increase our national consump- tion of wheat 171 million bushels a year. This the bakers urge us todo. They argue that it would help the farmer. It would help the wheat farmer, to be sure. But it would injure other farmers, especially meat growers, for if we eat more bread we'll naturally eat less of something else. How- ever, bread is the best bet. Highly nourishing. Few foods pre. cheaper, which may be why Americans are eating less of it. os oes os Sos White children born to negro parents are discovered in H the heart of the Sudan, Africa, by Dr. H. E. S. Stiven, British ~ medical head at Port Said) “It runs in the family.” Father , and mother black as mid-night. Children white-skinned, flaxen hair, hazel-brown eyes. H Nature is phenomenally accurate, but even she sometimes makes a slip in her plans. No wohder, considering the amount she has to keep track of. The four-leaf clover is another of nature’s accidents. | Renee Prn ee nace Mer cae Nes | P ‘ ANSWER Written laboriously by pen, on ruled paper, comes a letter from Rodger. Dolan’s uncle in Iowa, an old-time! farmer, so old that he can remember when nearly every hired man was called Jonas. The letter is short. It says: “The real thing wrong with - American farm and ’prices received by the farmers is—over- production. That’s the only reason prices are ever low.” Granges might debate this. WIT A A Smart Alec walks into Lloyd’s insurance headquarters i Landon and asks the. office boy: “Can you insure my) soa : fe haope tol ” replies Bo yaa: Mia if Lg will fake. ‘seat e fire insurance department.” ‘ en, orginal | x | some are not good at all. . “bush. é ion, jokes js that the English have! Re eae OM velvety, clear, rosy-white complexion, resentful of Sam's) do now T would not have made such} began a hasty and rather mixed|north on business and couldn't bear ing the laws of his| x wretched failure of my life. I did| apology on behalf of the hotel for|to go back without seeing you. as well as her request. You} not take into consideration that my|what had occurred in the dancing|Come! Give me a welcome, for I've a ceiving treatment at a Bismarck On meeting a girl you do not want hospital for an absess on the lymph openly disrega to marry “y ave no aéto,” glands of the neck after an opera-| COUntTY & aes Feo 0 fomarey BY us T have no atto,” | & is reported improving. jean’t blame her very much, can] husband and 1 had been brought up| room, but his tone of annoyance was | traveled across three states to set FE NT — 1 VOUT ; | with entirely different standards of | an accusation in itself. here.” Roem iad sa Mie eee uaa An interesting mecting of the| I am in hopes that this terrible] living and each of us was striving| “Very—unfortunate.” he lamented.| The two stood hand in hand. Gray Woman's Nonpartisan club was held | thing that has come to her will blow | ty make the other conform to his |“We haven't heard the last of it, by| beamed approvingly. Gus too, Fri fternoon at the home of} ever and Sam will regain his eye-| own standard. any means.” smiling, but earnestly he said, “I'm nest Savilla, After a comfort | sight, and it will be a lesson to him| «J¢ exch of us had taken up our| “Prob'ly so,” the father agreed.| right glad to sec you, Mr. Gray for ed an efaborte luncheon in the future. own little measuring stick and |“An' I got something to say about it,| We're in trouble.” was served by the hostess. Their! In the meantime, of course, poor} planted it in the middle of the way |too. Get that dancin’ professor oft| In greater detail Briskow nf ADVENTTIRE OF next meeting will be held June 4 Sally has to shoulder much of the] and met there with understanding, |the place quick or I'll kill him.” |known the facts. When he had fin- 2 with the Moffit club Indies at the) nunishment. It is a strange thing} we probably would)have been living | The manager recoiled; his startled|ished his halting recital Calvin aS bad reputation. Very few of our best people go there. THE TWINS bungalow. | Leslie dear, that in this world we her today... eyes searched Briskow’s face in-| Gray's face was flushed with anger, Seiya x gins, | CAnnee hear disgrace——and Sam's] Remember, Leslie dear, that every: | credulously. “I—beg pardon?” there was a dark frown between his 7 | Twin babic +| trouble is more than physical, it is |thing in this world is a matter of | “I ain't hearf my kid's side of|eyes- By Olive Barton Roberts firopeynornstulde ra Be ae a disgraceful thing—alone. We all | cumpromise. the story yet, but I'm goin’ to see] “We'll see!" he muttered. “Wait There are lots of gountrjgs under | ion Rifew Hou) bat, thamitule girl | ome with, gome; ne who ale Your friend, her now, so you better get woid to here—or go back and tell Ma to ggy- ‘ : most always is perfectly innocent. : »BEATRIGE, | that jumpin’ jack in a hurry. That|™ence unpacking.” Then he s the ground opes é Land. | is-still living in an incubator, Mate latiebecucmantetd cave Rinne pone There are Brownie Lind and Gnome = “He discharged, of course, for| For perhaps ten minutes Gus wait- Land-and #1f Land and Pixie Land. Woman Ruler H ome of these little fairies are Orders Prohibition | nd and some are not so good and EVERETT UE BY CON we tolerate no rudeness on the part }¢d nervously; he was amazed finally TR DO of our employes—or our guests, for|to sce Gray approaching arm in arm 1 that matter; but I believe he is suf-|With the manager; both were laugh- - = ey So TASES fering some effects from the shock. | ing, the hotel man’s face was radiant wecc! SOMGBovY'S LosT A GOLD I couldn't welb ask him ty go be-| With good humor. To the departing India only woman ruler, the Ber The Brownies, like the Ragsies, i gam of B proclaimed pro-| | PLATED CIGARET CASH. GVEN IF IT ISA fore” stoke aa rates are king little folk and help people ;S*™ of F proc i ( ore. guest he said, genially: out whenever they anoin trouble, | Wiuitien Aor her Accoraing, ‘| T@aiGaret CASS LTS SOMEBODY'S PROPERTY “It'll take me prob'ly twenty min-| “You are not going to leave us, The elves, too, are nice, although | 40rd received bs Miss Anna A. Gor'| | AND OUGHT TO BE RETURNGD. -NO_ NANG utes, talkin’ to my girl. That'll give | After all, Mr. Briskow. On the con. they don't trouble themselves much about other Yeople’s affairs. They at her home in Evanston, like to come up out of their under- Bhopal has an area of more than ground homes and sit on rose-vines 6,900 square miles and a population and dance in the moonlight, and do | of about 1,000,000. It is the only things like that. state in India The pixies are tricky. They love The adop of * prohi nothing better than to play jokes mean a loss or 500,000 rupees rev- and have fun at other people's ex- enue y pense, “But,” s | But the gnomes, are downright cr geod than rupees will come to| mean. ‘They'd just about do any-|™Y people because of the prohibi- | thing ao dey would? tion of alcohol.” ‘The Bengam is an) One day after the’ Twins had anding eure CLUE UTE helped the Ragsies put the sauce- ulers hecause of her intense | ow THE OVUTSIDE, cer's LOOK INSIDS.— him time, if he moves fust. But I| trary we are going to keep you at me WHATHS TH may get through fi fifteen. the Notch as long us you'll stay. he, At the déor to nts suite Gus Bris- | Stu misunderstanding on my Sess kow paused to wipe his countenance clean of the expression it had worn you to move but into better for the last few minutes, and when | Suite—the very best one we have. he entered it was with his usual| And the rate will}, same, Come! friendly smile. Allie and her mother | What do you say?” were waiting; they were white and| “Dunno’s I want to stay at all.” silent. Gus kissed his daughter be-|Gus murmured, angrily. “We ain't saying: no better ‘n we was a half hour “Don't worry, hon he won't | #g0." + bother you no more. \ “To be sure, but I've made you Allie averted her face. Mrs. Bris-| better known,” said Gray. “You kow inquired. “Did you see thel#re too shy; you didn’t afford my man's Christi Temperance Union, id the Bengam, “a great- | al interest in the welfare of | skunk 2” friend here the pleasure of making Seer athena, the occ little Rages [SE People. and her efforts to ‘im-| “No. I give him a few, minutes to| your acquaintance, and I had to tell high aera sed cule nie prove the condition of women in her | cloay cue” him the sort of person you really are. Fe ote eee ane AE | country. j “Hadn't we better leave, tov?"|Serves you right Gus, for being so e ventured Allie. exclusive. Gad! I think I'll gi latel. The rose-bushes and pane ————————————— ie. think I'll give you “Oh-h!” In Ma’s eyes wds such|® few lessons in democracy. N@o bleak dismay, such a piteous appeal,| then, come along! J'm dying to san Tee sies and peoni 1 to have the | carth all’ loosened around then so| GIRLS! MAKE UP y M that Gus shook his head, Ma.” they will grow better. We'll dig A LEMON CREAM “What fer? We got nice quarters} As the father trotted down the around the roots and carry more jand your ma likes it here—" hall beside his swiftly striding de- rich earth from the woo, and then | E ngs . water them. ‘That ought to make Lemons Beautify and Whiten them do finely. in; 2 a So the Ragsies, helped by willing Shiny algo aaa Lan little Nancy and Nick, started in to Freckles work for dear life. | NE Ragsy land, being under the mix the juice of two lemons with ground, no one could see them, but three ounces of Orchard White, they were there just the same. \which any druggist -will supply for After while everything was fin- 4 few cents, shake well|in a: bottle, ished. “Now, then, I'm sure that) nq you have 2 whole quarter-pint (Mrs. Brown will’ say her garden has | of the most wonderful skin spftener never done so well,” said Mister Tat- | and complexion beautifier, Massage ters, as he wiped: his muddy hands) this sweetly fragrant lemon cream “They're laughing at my I heard| liverer he gasped. “How'd you do ‘em hollering.” ¢ it” : r ‘Allie related her experience with|, (Continued im Our Next Issuef Professor Delamater: she told it all SSS b to the burst of shouting that fol- — ieved her thegh the tebe ult A THOUGHT ‘ ——_—_—______.._§_» should of heard ‘em yelling, clapping their hands! I” she choked, her ; voice failed her, miserably she con-| He that hasteth to be rich hath an cluded— “I wish to God we'd never| evil eye, and considereth not tl struck oil!” ” poverty shall come upon him—Pr “You're just wore out, dearie,”} 28:22. g her mother said, comfortingly, and Briskow agreed. yHe assured her ) Poor’ in abundance, famished at a on his overalls and turned to £0 into the face, neck, arms and hands, that all would be well., 4, donstarb Pann ars pletels but his geand.- away. hing, | {hen shortly note the youthful beau- All was not well, however.® The| OO mig ever ecrateny fe ie But Nancy had noticed something. | ty, softness and whiteness of your next morning when Gus Briskow y bial “Look!” she said. skin, was about to léuve the hotel as It was Crookabone, the gnome, tip-| Famous sthge veauties use this usual—Professor Délamater having HIGH COLLAR. teeing toward the roots of a large | harmless lemon cream to bring that departed hurriedly the evening be-) ‘The very high collar of organdie fore with fully four minutes of his| has made its a rance. - twenty to spare—he was stopped by| dered with taldnigtit ‘bine eer the manager, who requested him to| let’ organdie. | we also as a frecklé, sunburn, and tan (Copyright, 1923, NEa Service, Inc.) , bleach Because’ it doesn’t irritate. t, and I apologize . I'm going to . eer

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