The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1924, Page 4

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: 6 m pe es pl hi E m pl au ci ec n iz Seat em ee 1 ‘ ft 1 ‘ a PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - : : Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publishers CHICAGO - - : DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or|s republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not | otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- | lished herein. : | All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION , THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | this ress ine. The: sented here in order thi of import being disc the day. John sador former ambus-; orary degrees from universiti in this count and abroad, is a Dem- oerat of parts. He has been wide- Jy mentioned a man highly fit! for hig op: nomination — for} President, and is a member of a, legal firm in New York whes clients are important in busmess and industrial enterpri: It has ‘been suggested that he ire from SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year............. Budo dcau oon eh Xb) Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). . ves ae0) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bis marck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THE DAWES COMMITTEE’S REPORT + The directness with which the Charles G. Dawes com- mittee of Lusiness men tackled the problem of ascertaining Germany capacity to pay reparations was an engaging change from the maneuvers of previous conferences of di- plomats and official representatives of the various nations. The Dawes committee has persisted in this directness in its report to the reparations commission, and because of the candor of the committee, the recognized disinterestedness of its members and their devotion to their task there is great hope that from its work may come a solution of the economic problems now besetting Europe. The plane upon which the committee placed its activities presig® a favorable reception of a reaso) ible report. Firs Germany must pay, but she must not pay beyond her means; seco Germany’s fortunes are inextricably bound with those of the rest,of the Central European powers and all can benefit by an economic recovery of the German states. With regard to the French position, Mr. Dawes and his asso- ciates recognized France’s priority in reparations payments because of the enormous damage suffered through destruc- tion in that country during the war; the committee approved the principle of France’s claim to the right to exact pe ments from an unwilling former enemy country, but politely | and firmly the French were informed that if Germany hon- ; estly endeavors to bring the country to a sound basis and to pay reparations, France must be willing to relinquish physical contro] in the Ruhr and let the task be accomplished by Germany. The Dawes committee finds that Germany is able to pay, but that in order to pay the country must be willing to do sp. Its recital of the situation is a plain statement to the German people that if they attempt to cheat the allies out of reparations they will bring economic disaster upon them- , selves. An exacting task is set before Germany, sacrifices are demanded, but at the same time Germany is informed that her load is not to be too great for her to bear, nor greater than many of the countries which emerged victors in the Great We S-abilization of currency by means of a huge loan, crea- t’on of a bank to issue paper money for Germany and handle the reparations account, restoration of her industries in the Ruhr, a mortgage upon the railroads controlled for the bene- fit of Germany and her allies, are among the steps proposed to restore economic equilibrium to Germany. . The first reaction of public opinion in France and Ger- many to the Dawes report appears favorable. From the broad principles presented alone, general approval is likely to be manifest. A pathway to a new prosperity is offered Europe, and it is to be hoped that she will not turn aside. PLANTER T. C, Luther is planting 550,000 trees this year — white and red pine. Forestry experts call him the champion tree planter. He certainly is far and away ahead of old Apple- seed Johnny, who years ago wandered around the country planting appleseeds from which sprouted many of America’s finest orchards Luther lives in Mechanicsburg, N. Y. He plants for profit —grows crops of timber on idle lands. Forest Protection Week is coming, April 21-27. Don’t forget to plant at least one tree. Great sport, watching it grow. Also, it’s a duty we owe the future. Former genera- tions planted for us. i NOT SO EASY ‘ Being in business for yourself is not always as smooth sailing as most of us imagine. In the last three months over 5600 American business concerns failed. This doesn’t in- clude many thousands who quit, without formally failing, | because they could not make a go of it. But when you compare commercial mortality with the percentage of men who approach old age without having got- ten-much of anything, you readily see that there’s nothing like being in business for yourself, even if it’s only running | a peanut stand. A man who can make money for others can make it for himself—if he has the courage. | 7 SKYWARD French government offers a prize of 200,000 francs for ap: airplane that will capture the speed record now held by | Americans. The offering of this prize shows that the airplane still is | primarily a military device. if it were otherwise, the goal of the flying game would be| a_ safe, economical, fool-proof plane that could be used as generally as the auto. But war requires speed. So speed | is the goal. Pa CHILD LABOR “Ahead goes the movement for a constitutional amend- ment that would permit Uncle Sam to abolish child labor all over the country. Its opponents are harping away as hard as ever, and haven’t changed their arguments—chief of which is that the! regtilation of child labor is a right of the individual states. States, however, also have DUTIES as well as RIGHTS. And-when they fail to meet their duties, the national govern- tent should be able to step in and compel them. AUTOMOBILE OUTPUT "Tis year five million autos will be manufactured, it’s being predicted by men at the head of the industry., In 1900 the output was only 4000 cars. Quite a jump. ee ur generation, properly disrespectful of the old, is quick to adopt the new. Except politically. What a shame, we g are so bright at business, so dull in selecting and. remodeling our government, basically to meet | conditions, - ¥ | iaiiicaiidaiiaileesdi + The | Would wait to his present professional connec- | tions in order to strengthen the possibilities of nomination. | His reply to this is as follo | “Any lawyer who surrenders his independe: y trimming | his professional course to suit | the gusts of popular opinion, Judgment, not only dis- himself, but degrades it profession, 1 tell t I would not | his er you in candor tl pay this price for any honor in the gift of man.” Thus Mr. Davis calls to public attention one thing which make: many men of distinction and great capacity for valuable public serv- ice, consistently refuse tenders of pelitical favor. Demagogues get into public life by playing up to the prefudices and ignora political groups who pr. wealth and busin unfit men for service to the co mon people, when exactly the éon- trary is true, They promote dis- tenfpers and errors among the peo- ple, fa y charge that business is dishonest, and that-lawyers par- ticularly who professtonally serve a Dew \Tau. YouTo STN COWRA Bun 1 WAS GomnG CLEAN AND GoTo Tie THeATee TONIGHT WANT TH DING a mit- mith — OA Wat ws ? | Spring Is Not All Sunshine And Posies : lL “onYen~1 ves NOT Sto Se foe. ForGep - LTS Seg No yi ONG* fu Feo od Waal iT WAS WA MINUTE 4 great enterprises are not worthy of trust. It is in fact integrity, honor and ability which win for fine lawyers the confidence of great business. John W. Davis is high in profes- sional standing because of his ad- mirable qualities, and it is because of his fidelity to duty that the rats and vermin, the skunks and crooks of pol: seek to inflame | (fairy had to put her hands over her ea ‘All right! All right!” she laugh- ed. “But remember you won't stay new long. You'll lose cars and tails and get dinged and lose your paint and be left out in the rain and every- thing. It's always that way when! kiddies play with toys.” “We don't care! We don’t care!” the ignorant crowd against him.! _°'° ere a What ihe has said is of especial “78 all the Doofunn eee significance to William G. McAdoo. |,,,"Please do hurry," croaked the Chicago Journal of Commerce, | /ittle frog. “You haven't changed me back yet and the mink may come any minute.” “Tl begin on you,” said Wings, waving her wand. Instantly the little shivering fiog changed back into a puffy, cotton jfrog with tissue-paper skin, He looked very happy. Then one by one she changed all! jthe toys, and made them like new,| except the Cut-Outs. They were so shioned that they needed a new set of clothes altogether. IMPORTANT LECTION Silver; of one or more ach of the district school boards will take place in dune. So much of the success es- pecially of the small rural school depends on the board that the ipeo- ple of the district need to be very careful in selecting it. One un- worthy member may so interfere with the school that it will be al- Most worthless for a number of years. A great deal has been writ- election members take the toys to their new homes. As for Mister Fuzz Wuzz, the pipe-cleaner man, he wanted to go back to his old home and live with his master, who made him, Nancy and Nick said goodby to Silver Wings, but as she flew away} she called, “I think the Fairy Queen, |has a new adventure for you.” | (To Be Continued) ' (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | ten and said about just what kind of person makes a good board} Certainly the usual char- of a good citizen such fairness, kindness, and public spirit are necessa There is the teacher to be selected. The board needs to know where to go or to whom to write in order to find teachers, what personal quali- ties make for succ ful class-room work, and what salary must be of-|® fered to secure a competent teach-| | er. The board ought to know how] @. to attend to the affairs of the dis- Tom Sims Says i > trict in a businesb-like way. This| “Fly Around World’—headline. means that it will be able to make|And the first thing you know you {up a budget, know how much! Will be wishing all the flies were] money there is for the year, where | round the world. the money comes from, how it] | ° rR an should ‘be spent, and will keep| When you sce a man_ sitting ; careful accounts. Moreover, school, around looking worried it is a coal ‘trustees should be men and wo-!dealer wondering if . winter really men wise enough to leave profes-i has gone. wes ol sional teaching matters to the; teacher. Finally they must be the kind of folk that the children of the community can respect,—Car- son (N. D.) Press. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON lj _————— Spring is here and the farmers are feeling their oats. When the political pot starts boil- ing it makes a lot of smokes, Fine thing about having a garden jis you can pick what you want. should be — used schools,” says Tom Edison. doesn't mean the bathing should teach figur “Movi in Bul_he girls: Nancy and Nick started Doofunny Land, taking the frog with them. “Do hurry,” the frog kept saying, looking back nervously toward the pond to see if the brown mink was following. “Do you think the fairy will be gone?” “I think not,” back to green Bathing suits will show the win- ter left some people in bad shape. A rum ship caught fire off the coast of Florida, but not one of the boys stood on the burning deck. !PEOPLE’S FORUM‘ e| aid x sce how you “She liked yourself.” “Well, I don't like myseli a bit and T want her to change me back the way I used to be. I wasn't afraid of anything thén except the wooden waddle duck.” When they arrived, there were Mister Fuzz Wuzz.and Silver Wings and everybody waiting anxiously to see what had happened: “Well, did you like it?” asked Sil- ver Wings when she spied the little green fellow in Nick's hand. “No, I didn't,” said the frog. “An enormous beast was after me and I hear that is usually the end of all real frogs. I'd rather be made of cotton and paper and last a while longer.” “That’s the way with me,” squeak- the little tin mouse. “In Doofunny Land I have only the patent-leather cat and the stocking kitten to fear, and neither of them are very fast runners.” “And you know how much chance bunnies have!” declared the cotton rabbit, flapping his long, limber ears, “The only thing is,” quacked the duck, “we all miss the children. What will we do when the Twins go home?” Suddenly the little fairy had an idga, “I know what I'll do!” she eried, “What do you say if I fix each of you up like new, and then take you to the houses of children who haven’t many toys.” Instantly there . were so many; voices ell Yelling &t once that the PENNY WISE AND POUND FOOLISH Editor, The Tribune: For a long time there have been canvassers going from house to house offering for sule merchandis such as is handled by legitimate merchants of tHe city. There is no ‘use denying the fact that the merchants feel from this, otherwise sen ie housewives blinded to their own best interests and the best interest of Bismarck by the glitter of a few cheap prizes offered as premiums with the in- ferior merchandise. Who is it that spends his time and money to make a better Bismarck? Is it the peddler or is it the merchants that pay tax- es, rent and wages, bésides contri- buting to the various activities that: come up from time to time as was evidenced last night at the ‘Mardi Gras.” A CITIZEN. INCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with the Secretary of State include: Krueger and Company, Minot; cup- E. Y. Krueger, Peter C. Tangen and W. F. Krueger of Minot. Belfield; capital stock $10,000; incor- porators, M. Schwartz and Ben Neff, Lorenz Auto Co., Bowman; capital The Twins helped Silver Wings to} | but the Harvey, South Side Mercantile Company, Belfield; H, A, Mackoff, Dickinson. ‘ TO SIMS, NEW S ' PAPER MILLENIUM COMING SOON STRANGE THINGS SURE ARE HAPPENING Well, well, well, a New York actor used to accept 0,000 left him a will, he did and we can prove it. So from now on anything can hap- Don't be surprised if bootleg- gers start telling the truth, or if women stop reducing their ages, or if auto drivers 'suddenly remember they too were pedestrians once. When an actor ‘refuses money the millenium grabs its hat and coat and prepares to arrive. SOCIETY The window curtains which Mrs. Soandso reported stolen from her home yesterday have been found and were not stolen at all. Grace So- andso, her beautiful daughter, had used them to make a spring dress. ADVERTISING Ten thousand excuses for being lazy! What would they be worth to you? We may publish them soon. Right now we are too lazy to write them. EDITORIAL The news that a New York young- ster speaks five languages will not startle the universe, not after the matter is duly considered. The av- erage baby of less than a year speaks at least a dozen languages, includ- ing Chinese. ETIQUETTE Carrying matches is evidently bad form because no one seems ,to do it. * WEATHER Our chief kick against spring is it doesn’t fall on a holiday. HEALTH HINTS Poor blood circulation may ,be stimulated by getting mad-at some- body. Cupless It's true the great Creator made expressions by the score; expres: sions that are registered each day And human beings’ faces are the places they are for; they're change- able and no one comes to stay. For instance, when there's sad- ness, sorrow eyes will indicate, and the same cyes also tell you when there's cheer. An inkle of a twinkle seems to very frankly state that the heart is full of gladness; shy of fear. Spreading smiles is quite a tonic, stock /$10,000; incorporators, R. J. Lorenz, Johanna Lorenz, C. A. Hyke, Bowman. Minstrel Show. Blazes Its Way - Across Country Some press agents aver that old- time minstrelsy, presented in the manner of ‘a decade or more ago, has a tharm that will never die. Without debating this question, it can be safely said that the performance by Harvey’s Minstrels, the attraction announced for the Auditorium on April 14, is not lacking in charm and tunefulness or in that mysterious. commodity known as “pep,” says a show announcement, Since “Shuf- fle Along” blazed its’ bright way across the theatrical firmament. to well-merited success, numerous other entertainmeyts presented by negro troupes havé made a\bid for favor. ital’ stock $25,000; incorporators, J, Many shows of this kind are being presented throughout the country, Minstrel organization hag awakened interest in entertain- mept by negroes that will do much toward holding added interest in fav- or-of the’ colpred shows, x ‘advance notices’ state franklythat hee SPORTS No training for baseball fans is complete without mastering a few cuss words to call the umpire. Hit- ting your finger with a hammer will help you think up these cuss words. Hit the fingers on the left hand, using the right hand for writing down the cuss words as they come to you, = FASHIONS The necklace craze continues. A woman needs a necklace to toy with because she has no pockets for her hands. SCHOOL NEWS Truth is stranger than fiction. The man who hid wild west novels be- hind his geography has a son who hides radio catalogs. BROTHER TOM’S KITCHEN Count your fingers thoroughly after grinding up hamburger steak. DIVORCE A quick way of getting a divorce is by believing woman's place is not only in the home but in the kitchen. POLITICS We look for the senators to hurry through with their investigations when the baseball season starts. TO STAY SINGLE Telling a girl how cold your feet stay on winter nights may save her from marrying you. CLEAN NEWS After dusting off the old phono- graph records with a light brush, hit them with a heavy sledge ham- mer. : FARM NEWS Poison ivy is eager to meet the picnickers and summer boarders. BEDTIME-STORY “You, put enough, grease on your face every night to bake a cake.” ° for they cheer the whole wide world, and it seems a catching, too. appealing when you find them up- ward curled—when ‘you smile the! world is bound to smile with you. Frowns? Well, they are not so! ‘pleasant. Life’s too short to be a! ‘grouch, People oft avoid the surly type of .man. Stand up straight and. look your finest; that’s much better | than to slouch. If you'll only try to do it—why, ‘you. can! (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) pleasing smile is} no old shop worn songs or old jokes are to be offered, but ani entirely new line of chatter, and songs, will be presented in the inimitable manrer that only darl¥es can. provide. The Harvey Minstrels. is crowded full of bright spots.in fall measure, |’ and the Southern touch is not lack: | ing in the singing of Margaret Jack-| son, the modern “Black Patti,” Harry Fiddler and the clever act presented by Johnny Woods, The performance |' is in three parts, opening with the minstrel circle, followed by a series of high class vaudeville acts, and closing with a ‘musical review. The usual band parade will take place at noon, and a concert in front of the theatre at every performance, A THOUGHT | Reddish lips are so|' :complish nothing. ... . Published by arrangement with Associated First Natl Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen version produced py, Erank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Copyright 1923 by \ "wIF’ LIX (Continued) be was wearing a black dress with a long jade necklace and a large black hat, and, as he ran down the steps, he had time fur- ther to observe that she was even whiter than usual and had dark rings under @r eyes, “It 1s too beautitul a morning to remain indoors,” she said, as she eave him her hand and he took the @eat beside her. “We will drive in the park and then up the river for a bit.” j | She was compjetely at her ease, and she was the Madame Zattiany of the night he had met her. But she did not elaborate the role, and asked him how he had left his friends at the camp and if he had enjoyed his fishing trip. “Enough of this,” he interrupted, when he had mastered his excite- ment at being close to her once more. After all, he had expected something of the sort. She was just the woman to fall bacx on her infernal technique. “I know that you went down to Huntersville to meet Hohenhauer, and that the re- sult of that interview was an ab- rupt flight from me—possibly from him. I want the truth.” Her face had flushed, but as the color ebbed she looked almost waxen. “I relied on Din——' “Well, I guessed it and he admit- ted the fact. And if he hadn’t I'd have come after you, anyhow. Your note was enough to tell any man something was wrong. I shall not be put off and I will have an an- swer to my questions. Do you love me no longer?” “Oh, yes,” she said softly. “I love you.” But when he tried to take her hand she drew it away. “Do you still intend to marry me?” “Won't you give me a few days more to think it over?” “No, I will not. And—do you need them? Haven't you already made_up your mind?” Countese Zattlany, PUN G Gertrude ‘Atherton ' = saw her long upward curving nop tril grow rigid. But she said quietly: “And what do you think you would have done with me, Lée, after we were on the Plane of common mortals once more? Transports do not last for ever, you know, and we are not heedless young things with no thought of the future. You have acknowledged there is no place for me here, and there wbuld be no place for me in Europe if I married ryou. Do you wonder thet I came away to think, after Prince Hohen: hauer—who, remember, knows me far better than you do—pointed out the inexorable truth? What would you do with me, Lee?” He stared out of the window in his turn—at the tender greens of the park. He could hear the birds singing. Spring! The chill of win. ter was in the car, and it emanated from the woman beside him. “I don’t know,” he said miser. ably. “I only know that I love you and would take any chance! “But, yow see, although it is my misfortune to love you, I recognize that there is a long generation be tween us. I thought I hed spanned it, but—do you realize that we have literally nothing to give each other but love? That we are as unlike as——” , yes, I realized all that the night you left. But I ddn’t care, Cannot you trust me?” “There is that long generation, Lee. And it is I who have lived it, not you. LAved it and outlived the woman who began it. The godsina sportive. mood made us for each other—and then sent me into the world too soon. . . ..I must go on. It is rot in me to go back nor to remain becalmed. Hohenhauer told me many cruel truths. Those women at my dinner might have enlightened me if I had not delib- erately bandaged the eyes of my mind. I chose to forget them at once. But Hohenhauer——’ She shuddered. “Well, although I was Jinfuriated with him at the time— Car iad “‘What Is the solution, Lee?’” She sighed and looked out of the window. They were driving up Witth avenue and the bright straet was full of color and life. The buses and motors were filled with | Women on their way to the shops,. whose gay windows were the most enticing in the world. New York, in this, her River of Delight, look- ed as if'she Had not a care in the world. Madame Zattiany did not speak | again until they Were in the park. hayé ‘promised to, marry you, remember; and} do. not lightly go back.on ‘ty word... .”. beeen I had intended to ask if you would be willing to let me go alone to Vienna ‘for six months~and then join me——" “After I had lost you completely! ‘I shall marry you here, today, or not at all. I love you but I'll not let you play with me. I'll go to Austria with you, and you may do ' a& you choose when you get there. ‘You'll belong to me and I'll make | the. best of it.” “If I married you now it would Bot be worth my while to returo to Austria, .-... You see, I'd be an American. I'd no longer be Grafin Zattiany. . ... Icould ac- It is the strangest thing {nthe world, but I never had thought of changing my mame—~ on, “Until Hohenhauer reminded you, I suppose. Well, I could have told you that myseif. 1 tad count- ed on it, if. you want to, know the truth.” foyat “Ah! ‘Then you counted on that “To have you altogether. Yes.” And then he added ‘hastily: “But up there—you must bellere this—I mever gave it a thought—after— ,after you promised to marry me at “ence.” He doubted if she had listened "to this protéstithat there had been ‘gp hour when the complete bar- he hate he will Reprove not a scorner, le thee; rebuke-a wise man, ant love thee.—Prov. 9:8. Réprove thy friend privately; commend him publicly.—Solon, CUT THIS OUT—IT IS. WORTH MONEY /. - Send this ad and ten cents to Foley & Co,, 2885 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Tihs writing “yout™ name wid -addresy” ing of: oul ‘he had’been. above plotting: 7 su clearly, You will receive a ten cent rae of FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR MPO! for coughs, colds and Novena free mple packages of FOLEY PILLS, liuretic stimp- it for the kid: id FOL ARTIC TABLETS tor Constipat what he sald was true. Every word. I must go forward. I can not—cannot go back.” . “He appealed to your ambition, your love of power, I suppose——” “He shgwed me to myself for rexactly what I am,” she said Phatically. “No appeal would have made the slightest impression on me if I had really and finally re. turned to my Mary Ogdenhood up there in the woods of my real youth. My God! ,What incredible folly! What powers of self-delu- sion! But we both have that mem. fory.. Let us be grateful. I at least shall hold {t apart from all memo. riés as long as I live.” “Are you going to marry that man?” ‘That {s so purely incidental that it 1s not worth talking about. I came away to think out my own problem. I love you and I believe that I shall always love you—but J don't see any way out. I have killed once and for all that fatal talent for self-delusion that I hag thought was dead—well, as dead be as my love for Moritz Hohenhauer; and nothing could be more dead than that. My brain feels like a crystal house {lluminated by searchlights, strong enough to pen- etrate every corner but not strong enough to blind. 1 could never, it I would, deceive myself again, nor® Ms make another mistake, so far as human prescience will serve me.” He looked at her hands. Her gloves were black suede and they made those handg look smaller, but he had an idea that if he lifted one it would fall of its own weight. He made no. comment and she said in a moment: “Perhaps you may have an inspiration. [f there is any solution for us, believe me when I say that it would make. me as happy as it could. make you.” But her hands did not relax. 4To Be Concluded.) tion and Billiousness. These wo: derful remedies have helped mitt of people. Try them! Adv.. xpends A large eastern railroad $90,000 a year for engine.» “4

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