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+-of it all, Godfrey declares. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WOULD MURDER “CHILDREN FOR LOVE OF MAN Becomes Faint Hearted as She Sees Offsprings Eat Poisoned Candy TO CONFESSES POLICE Man Involved Denies Guilt; Says He Did Not Kill Husband By George Britt NEA Service Writer n, not even her husband, ever aid flatter attention to Myrtle ide befor, est Kufahl came room at her home. These lines, perhr r explanatory background and moti tion for e myste tragedy resulting in the woman be- ing held on charges of giving a dead- loeping d to her husband ttempting to poison her four sh the incredible and children. sin the drama: }, pretty, capable, 52, hardworking, conscientious, phlegmatic. | Kufahl, 29, prim and restrained. And the ghildren—Ralph, 16 bert, 12; Mae, 9; Lawrence, well-behaved and well-liked, less, pol help- , in woeful innocence. In her cell in the county jail at Elkhorn, Mrs. Schaude constantly is pleading to see her babies. “I can’t bear the thought of being sent away from my children,” she wails again and again, Pleads For Children Yet, according to the authorities, if she had not faltered some weeks } ago in sa icing them, the ehildren now would be in the cemetery beside their father. This, the police declare is the story they’ve pieced together bit by bit: For 18 years Mrs. Schaude drudged through her married life. Her neigh- bors regarded her as a model mother | and a stand-by in her church, On the faxm, she helped her husband in the fields. 7 | When the family moved to town,| she began keeping boarders. Kufsh!) came to room at her house. He vol- unteered to help Mrs. Schaude wash the dishes and tidy the house. Drinks and Dies ' In the spring, Schaude betame ill.| His wife was exhausted from nursing him, so Kufahl offered to take her place at night. Kufahl, according to. Mrs.'@¢ fashions tod. pelieves, and Schaude purported statement, in spite of their experience and their agreed to mix a drink that would j.cumulation of wisdom, women of | quiet the patient.. M aude ‘ob- iniddle age are © wheedled into jected. 1 in: ions by the yper-—just be- ced he knew what he was doing se they don’t think, she believed him. ‘Mira) tiiiidvetht believes! thay thel| She placed the glass beside the jeauty of the woman of 40 is as dis-' During the night Schaude tinctive us tit of the sub-deb, but | and died. rforial scduirementasor the! Kufahl threatencd her with a {he Sirtoral require AIEEE a similar fate, Mrs. Schaude maintains, © «ph, woman of 40 need only be as if she should breathe the secret. ipm aboutavhat she wants as the The Auto Ride 16 is,” she states, “to get a/ Last summer, dressed in her wi- 1 tiem tReahion: hee dow’s black, Mrs. Schaude te: Mind Set | Kufahl on a MeGrathy),” “cyvouth dooanvt comprom | Minn, They talked of marriage, she ¢1,5 yoy aecentsloridh but he objected that she could the children with her. ptember evening she bor- owed a neighbor's automobile and »k-the children for a ride. fore r hing a sharp turn .in the oad, she produced a bag of ine had been placed ich chocalate drop. would be stricken would plunge over The deaths would embankment. ur accidental. But clandestine infatuation. Mrs. Schaude’s heart fluttered warningly as her offspring tasted. | ) Kufahl Denies Guilt | “Spit them out,” she screamed. “They'll poison you.” And with her own fingers she re- moved @ sticky wad from Baby Law- rence’s mouth, | Ralph refused to be seared. He} swallowed his candy. But the mother | “rushed all back to town and called a| physician. Ralph took sick, but re-| eovered. District Attorney Alfred L. God-} frey stepped into the case and be-| gan askirig questions. Twenty-four | hours later she made a clean breast | Kufahl, also in Elfhorn jail, la-| _ boriously denies’ Mrs. Schaude’s in-| eriminating statements. And of her he-will not talk. * “I’m.not going to injure her,” he MOTHER! .Child’s “California Fig Syrup” mother love conquered ‘over ,....,. Best Laxative Is|” “MAN OF THE HOUR” IN RHINELAND REPUBLIC - wints,to Herr o shows H Note his boc Arrow ment. Ph Chapelle 1 interviewers. “When this is} she gets back to her] senses, I don’t want any vtords of mine to affect her feelings for me.” GIVES ADVICE TO WOMEN OF MIDDLE LIFE Tells Women of 40 to Look at Mirror Before Adopting Dress of Sixteen y Marian Hale EA New York, ast 40, look mirror and fash- into your count 10 before following the | ion dictates of the girl of 16.” This is the advice given to women by Mrs. Albert H. Hildreth of Syra- cu Y., former president of the New York § Federation of Wo- men's Clubs. The sixtec he arbiter f ik kes her demands so insistent thet she hammers them in- to the consciousness of fashion de- “Older w n know what they t well % the per does, ont bstitutes. ture n may note the dic- by the young This is poor sports-| vomen tell me that| the ave lowed *to| young. girl elect hi : select, inevitably It is the moth- simple one ers who want the frills and the fur-| |. belo e young girl keeps a knowing eye on line and color effects. knows how to give a certain individ- ual touch to any frock. She’s Right “The flapper is nine-tenths right! in her adoption of simplicity but mother must remember that this ean be overdone, particulary if the figure has lost slenderness. “New shades are very fascinating, too, but they also call for diseretion. Love-apple red, for instance, is not for mother. “The rule of the young girl in! dress is here,” she concludes, “let us be good sports and face it, but let us not be too submissive. “We can make ourselves a power,’ too, if we take our stand.” / PEOPLE’S FORUM | o A PIONEER’S BIRTHDAY. Fate thought it fit and seemly to bestow on Miss North Dakota and Mrs. John P, Dunn an_ identical birtad&y. For North Dakota it was he. guards Wi 9 HUA c | for sentiment on the part of a great | Which no selling of liquor is t erman merchant, who is aving ihe headqu one of mM ba station to watch the in—on its golden an This time she wen alone, except for the kind friends who pushed her wheeled ch Perha knowled; of this fact, this link binding the past to the pres- cent may have prompted those officials of the Northern Pacific railroad to send their cordial greetings in the form of a wonderful cake, the real, hd. party kind, with “Birthday Greetings to Mrs. J, P. Dunn, 18: Nov. 2, 19: in exquisite candy- bead embroidery on the top and a row of sweet little pink posies en- circling the whole. Ordinarily, 4 posed to be destitute of soul, but the birthday greeting to Mrs. Dunn gives ample assurance of a fine capacity nt to the corporation toward one who has stood by and watched its growth throzhout a half-century and more. Time, however lends a tender, mel- lowing influence to us all. An ob- server could hardly look on at that group of’ pioneer women—mostly of the ’70'’s—assembled “at~a surprise party on the birthday of one of their | er, without reflection upon the invisible tie of friendship, the bond j time alone can evolve. ow, sitting in her Mrs. Dunn finds life sweetened, and | ched by the abundance of: her | friendships. Solaced in her afflic- mers of the New Raine corporation is sup- | Belluno per {tr | ees i { wheel-chair! ™orning. There was formal opening.) xpproved by the federal government. | the lea s in the Separatist move- and Republic at Ai - pared to that of other nations, an officials believe inethe ne- ty of restricting the sale of li- quor as, besides the actual number | of deaths, there are the far greater !number of cases where diseases en- | gendered by alcoholism are produced. The problem assumes in official ey even grea that most of the ill coholism are hereditar; The official fi alcoholism show that deaths due to drunkenness are most numerous in a rate as 4.98 in the province of Vicenza and 4.25 jn the province of hundred thousand in- habitants. As is the case in most: other countries, so even in Italy, drunkenness is more frequent in the cold and industrial north than in the warm and agricultural even though in the latter are the wine growing provinces. NEW SCHOOL OPENED Dickinson, Nov. 6.—Dickinson’s newest school, the four room grade building erected on the South Side} at a cost of approximately $35,000, opened to pupils residing in that fon of the city and in the coun-| district to the south Monday tion by the companionship of those lieht hearted pals, th friends nde in the fat and days of | fronticr days, those blessed silver- haired kids, who have never forgot- ten how to play, yes, and who evch dence the Virg reel to the tune ) 1 it good ions life , for Mrs. 3, who mer- back to watch train pull in. PRICE BARNES. ITALY FEARS CLAMPING OF LID ON RUM duce Fear Among the Populace --deprived of th would US barren. inde Dunn, once a bride of ” rly rode up on horse the first N. AN. 6.—The proposed Ita- on by which the num- blishments selling. spirits is to be, in large towns, onlygone per thousand inhabitants, F by take place after 10.30 p. m., has raised considerable criticism, the general fear being that it may prove the thin edge of the wedge for introducing prohibition in Italy. Official figures have appeared, in defense of the propoged law, show- ing that the average number of deaths due to alcoholism per year is 600, that is about 16 per million in- habitants. Though this mortality is exceedingly slight, especially if GO RIGHT AT IT Friends and Neighbors in Bismarck Will Show You a Way. Get at the root of the trouble. Rubbing an aching back may re- lieve it, But won’t cure it if the kidneys are weak, * You must reach the root of it—the kidneys, © Rome, Nov. a.lonely birthday. No troop of pio- neer pals had she to swoop down upon her- with -gifts and-flowers, to take her breath away by a surprise party on her birthday, as was the happy experience of Mrs. Dunn last Friday afterno Of her sixty-cight birthdays, Mrs. Dunn has passed fifty of them in North Dakota, an average life-time of rich experience and memories. Even at this far-away date, one thrills involuntarily with pleasurable emotion on hearing about the “first N. P. train that pulled-into Bis- marek,” on June 7, 1873. As a bride ef seventeen, Mrs, Dunn, with ,her husband, rode sup on horseback to watch eagerly for that same train. One ‘can easily vizualize the mot! crowd, and hear in imagination, the noisy greetings. In, that same town, fifty yeats lat- . i Se Doan’s Kidney Pills go right at it; Reach the causc; atvack the pain. Are recommended by many Big- marek people. Ask your neighbor. Mrs, J, W. Moran, Sunny. Brook Dairy farm, Bismarck, says; “I had an operation for a floating kidney which was succecsfal but afterwards the other kidney became affected and I suffered for ne2zrly a year with lameness across my back. I got so dizzy I couldn’t stand. I went to the hospital and took treatments but got worse all the:time; I read about Doan’s Kidney Pills bqing good and got was entirely well\ and have. since stood kidney tests for insurance and passed O! K., thenks to Doan’s,” Price 60c, at all. dealers, Don’t simply ask for @ kidney remedy—get ‘ ame that Doan’s Kidney’ Pills—the -Milburn Co,, Mrs. Moran had. F. » After using two boxes I) Why Are not prettjer—wh? women grow old By Edna Wallace Hopper I was @ plain girl, but I made my-} self a famous beauty. 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I want you to learn what WATER RIGHTS TO FOREIGNERS ‘MEXICO BARS | Court Interprets Article 27) Which Nationalizes Sub- Soil Petroleum Rights FINDINGS IMPORTANT Foreign Office Refused to Sanction Action Until Case Was Taken to Su- preme Court ‘ Mexico City, Nov. 6—Land and ater righis in Mexico of foreigners @ viuuliy affected by a recent su- cme court decision interpreting ‘ue famous Article 27 of the Mexi- can Constitution of 1917, which play- d an iuporiant part in last sum- mer’s pre-recognit.on conference. he decision, although it does not touch upon that part of Article 27 hich nationalizes sub-soil petroleum rights, sets forth, broadly speaking, the principle that although foreign- may comply fully with the pro- ions of the law affect the acqui- ition of land and water rights in Mexico, it is within the power of the ministry of foreign relations to refuse to sanction their titles if such | refusal is deemed to the national in- terest. It also places upon that ministry the immense responsibility of regu- | lating in the interests of the re- publie the development by foreign pital of the immense sourees of ational wealth comprised within the | terms land and water rights, and in 'a measure regulating the investment of foreign capital in Mexico. | Court Finding, | The court’s finding, regarded as be- | ing of superlative importance to for- | eign interests in Mexico, especially jsinee it is accepted as a possible | indication of the’ bench's attitude | ‘toward foreign oil rights, came as a j result of an appeal by the Bacis | Gold and Silver Mining Co., Ltd., of Durango, tigainst acts of the min- istry of foreign relations alleged to be in violation of Articles 14 and 27, Fraction 1, of the constitution. The company declared that in 1896, | while ghe Bacis river was under the sdiction of the Durango state government, it secured a concession to usé the waters of the river in} operating a power plant, and when } the Bacis passed under federal jum | isdictign it complied with all legal | requirgments to have the concession Girls strawberry. Also all the best that) science knows to soften, feed and foster the skin texture. ; I use it_after the clay. Also as a night cream, also daytimes as a [powder base. Never is my skin, It costs! | Youth Cream means to you. only 60 cents, My Facial Youth is'a liquid elean- ser which I found in France. Great beauty experts the world over now employ jit. It contains no animal, no4 vegetable fat. The skin cannot ab-; sorb it, But it cleans to the depths, ; and removes from the skin all the dirt and refuse which nothing else can reach. You will know for the first time ‘what a clean skin means when you apply my Facial Youth. The cost is 75 cents. Hair You Marvel At Millions marvel at my luxuriant hair. It is thick and lustrous—finer far than 40 years ago. Falling* hair, | dandruff and gray hair have never come to me, This’ is also due to France, She} perfected my*Hair Youth. 1 apply it daily with an eye dropper, directly to the scalp. ‘It does not muss the hair, It cleans the scalp, stimulates | and fertilizes. Then the hair roots) flourish- and bring the ‘results I show. i Af you wish like, hair, use this method—the best that science knows. My Hair Youth costs 50 cents and°$1 with eye dropper. Sane All druggists and toilet counters supply. these preparations. Nothing else in all the world ean, bring you ke results. Go try them, Let-them ring you what.they brought to me. Eéna Wallace Hopper. Business = dress,’ Waukesha, Wis. f “NOTE: iss Hopper is now ap-}| ‘pearing ‘twice daily in the Pantages Theatres of the Pacific coast yan; western states. if \hese included the waiving of the company’s | United States government for pro- | tection of its interests and an agree- ment to consider | corporation power Supreme Court Decision. When the foreign office refused to sanction the concession appeal was had to the supreme-eourt. held, in effect, that: Mexican Gtizens, by birth or nat- if He that is slew to anger is better than the mighty; and he thd his spirit than he that taketh a city.—-Prov. 16:32. it is made. right to insofar as concession The Spread of a Great Country — Swift’s Premium Oleomargarine, as genuinely good as the natural farm products from which it is made, comes to you daily from twelve sunlit factories, Its quality has won nation-wide popularity. More ofit is sold than any other brand, Swift’s Premium Oleomargarine is sweet, pure, clean—untouched by hands in manufacture. ~ ~ Thousands have visited the white-walled, sanitary plants where Its wholesomeness is assured by the high quality of the «materials, the process of manufacture, and the U. S. Government inspection in effect at all plants, Swift’s Premium Oleomargarine gets its attractive color from the | natural color of the ingredients only. Its wonderful delicacy of flavor and its richness make it ideal to _ serve on your table and to use in your cooking. A worth-while saving on every pound, Get a Package Today Swift & Company, U.S. A.°* Manufacturers of Gem Nut lar appeal to the | quire land and ation, have the “right” to ac- | water righ but the cou te of mind which stituent cle 27, ha | ture dfthe article, | itself a Mexican the water ht,” even was concerned. though they comply ! MADE 10 with every legal requirement, since | all wool lthe article authorizes the state, ITS AND @ through the foreign office, to decide £825 whether it is to the public inter The court to sonctinn such® lend and w Fights as may be petitioned by f eigners and to sanction such rights, Satisfactic avor or grace.” OVERCOAT ‘onal Tailors not because of any mandatory fea- MEASURE Je ry lifted a hand trembling with anger — slashed Gilchrist across the mouth. * Gilchrist’s hands clinched. He drew himself up as if to launch himself against this snarling thing before him. Then, as suddenly, his frame relaxed. In his mind he had scen a figure—heard a voice. CHANNING POLLOCK’S sensations; of a generation. months. schools, ‘A DRAMATIC SCENE FROM ~ THE FOOL WONDERFUL PLAY NOVELIZED BY RUSSELL, M. CROUSE Pollock won world farae*with such earlier theatrical successes as The Pit, In the Bishop’s Carriage, Tho Little Gray Lady, Such a Little Queen, Roads of Des- tiny, The Sign of the Door, The Crowded Hour. But The Fool stands among stage gat In book form it ran through six editions in three Pollock was invited to discuss it before more than 300 universities. clubs and churches, He, has received the:Key: planted in his honor in Poets’ Row, Boston Common. CROUSE’S NOVELIZATION OF ; 3 (BEGIN READING IT IN THE TRIBUNE TODAY = 8 to Boston. A,tree has been ANN 8 6 eal it | { b a * ie Y rp ee i" id ch) &