The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 24, 1924, Page 4

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4 “PAGE FOUR THE. BISMARCK TRIBUN Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck D., as Second Class a. see | « mente Tewrs = this 2d pave | eis‘ tbinion’af ‘rae hefbunes Bay BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - ‘ . Publishers || our readers may have both Bides || sing taiscoassarta tie curecoee’ Foreign Representatives | tnertay: G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO : - - : - DETROIT NO EXCUSE FOR A TAX Marqurtte’ Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | ON RADIO ace a 10 per radio goods is of nonsense lowed forth in PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | NEW YORK - : Fifth Ave Bidg | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or) republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not}snecas the otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- |n lished herein ia rights of republication of sp« )'spatches herein | rom Bien erved Tue proposal je government idea of a especia nuisance MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION KATES PAYABL! IN ADVANCE [beings erent Daily by carrier, per year....... 87 20 ole and! benatilite ati: Daily by mail. per year (in Bismarck) 7.20 |eudes of people is xury to be Daily by mail, per year (in state outs Daily by mail, outside of North Dakat $ismarck) 5.00 | pounced upon not only’ to n and to in- THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) BESO missing CARRYING TRUTH TO THE EAST bankers assembled | “Three hundred esterday afternoon at a ption to Governor W aie H. McMaster and A. W Treasurer of the in hospitals State Rural Credit Bureau, both of South Dakota. © made hap Roe oe ere say Club. 120 tax or one d was arranged b ehman Brothers wl dister Gould purpose to acquaint t ja] district rd t fies Nes eID SE true picture of South Dakota. z s an agricultural hich it vi veler Dakota was we in the foref State. It is n crop State and co: does not share depression that other Northwestern States The total valu 1923 crop, the bond men were told, was $ 000, and of this $36,000,000 represented the dairy products alone.”— York Times. -Pacifi om the trip westward to the i ds of Japan { . . patie } |proper. They fc convenient The above reprint from New York Times shows neces- | Nesping signee on the ‘ease best sity of getting truth of North and South Dakota to the peo ¢ Northern A as the Aleu- ple of the large centers. If the northwest is broke and c course it is not, then the east cannot prosper long. Values |£ 4 and prosperity ¢ fixed largely by the tide of prosperity | wee in the agricultural sections. | There must be a greater movement of prs and new capital to the vacant lands of the Northv if prospero Pacific conditions are to be maintained. Land in the final analysis | acros is the basis of all wealth and if business sags to a point | where there is\no activity in land transactions, industria! | centers must feel the reaction soc or later. TRANSMITTING PICTURES Xi In conjunction with New York Times, the American |}* Telephone and Telegraph company transmitted fifteen phote- b Isldnds, stretching far to the| t from the Alaskan Penin- useway from the orth America. ast of the Aleu- he first of the 1 stretch of the hundred miles over that stret en took ano ainland of e Japanese U a’ y graphs over a telephone wire in two hours from Cleveland, along in Ohio, to test out a service installed for the Republican Na- 1g eD “ : eee While the} t envention. Among « rs was a picture of Calvin fighting snow Colic —views of buildings and city scenes appeared closer * and fo; e Frenc reser Slanccs than pictures of indi uals, but perfection of encountered Li em is promised later as a matter of routine. Ah cniraeenina Tr mplishment is remarkable and marks a new g sand is lik epoc' in diffusion of news pictures lightly more than t the fo nutes w necessary to send one U Larger ws took relatively longer Sending photos by radio is regarded a ment. Some success has been obtained in tyres b: future develop- transmitting pic- ss, but success has not been placed on a sure, _commerc ba: as yet ACROSS f 3 . 4 . The high mark of Canadian im- Basis of the invention is simple but details are complex migration into the United Through utilization of the photo-electric cell every variation has been reached during t of a beam of light can be translated into a variation of fe¥ months, it appears, < ic c ah eam aoe Seribiedt a auvanine ude id to be flowin electric current which can again be translated into a varia- . . . oa: = . f I est and east of tion.of light. Source of light used at Cleveland is the same gat in smallew volune” ; and er volume from the cas an ordinary automobile lamp. central section. The drift of Cana- S ci aaa dians across the line is:the most serious problem affecting Canada’s y SFU JING growth and prosperity. The prob- Z , 4 DRIVING: : as has al existed, for the The toll of the automobile continues. So large has'boundary is so unsubstantial that become the number of deaths from automobile accidents that oa ree xeriim qmpres ? Mewsys 7 any large cities rec iar. ,| Detroit, or Buffalo, or New York, @ewspapers in many larg cities record them daily in th or Chicago with no greater wrench -. fashion they might record the rising subscriptions in protr aes wees Ns than he would move to Toronto or | sted drive for funds for some cause. North Dakota Montreal + The police in Bismarck have shown commendable activity ieee tee aie Med But in beginning early a campaign against speeding. But their| wien 6 1 efforts will not avail to prevent fatal accidents unle motovisis themselves—and_pedestriz Bate ee . ¢aution. There ought to be in the mind of every automobile | Mover acrnee the. The dis- driver at all times the possibility of a slight mishap of his|covery was an unpleasant shock. | car or brief aberration causing a tragedy. But recent figures are far more dis- | The last legislature made the driving of an automobile con ares nineumonthe or.1628 | by one under the influence of liquor a very serious offense, Gon ae Le “000 ‘Canaaligirente and properly so. A man who goes through the street shoot-|ed the United States and registered ing at random is potentially no more dangerous than an Hels intention of remaining there. | intoxicated driver behind the wheel of a high powered auto-| ,2, “og July, Avene end Septenis | mobile. }10,000 a month. Officials estimate | __ Uhat this mei aps 25,000 41 month, because not THE SCHOOL ELECTION |#ll_who move out are officially re-| Reports not emanating from either of the candidates for |°C7204 48 permanent emigrants, t t 2 This movement, if intained, | the sthool board have intruded an issue into the contest that | would. mean a. los 0,000 al is not there. There is no disposition to curtail any school |year, which will scarcely be re- facilities anywhere ih the city. Those in the west end want | Paced iby Pranlpreuon end: natural no additional school facilities at the expense of the William akes out of Canada Moore or Richholt schools. Their only request is that the | native-born same seventh and eighth grade facilities be given the Roose- | them only-with babies and with vglt school as obtain at the William Moore and Richholt. Sin T eaked, abrivele. trom. arene pags ie results in a serious net loss to, the This is only fair play and a rearrangement that every country. — Manchester the census figures of 1921 the | were published it was learned with as well—use sane |ismay that a million or more Ca- sa migration of per- (ingland) schoal patron should welcome regardless as to choice for in- | Guardian | . dividuals seeking places upon the school board. AN ATTACK ON PIE | ‘¥ It is well to settle this issue early in the contest so that e A | there need be no fear or apprehension that some school is to] ‘The food value of pies i be’ robbed of facilities or grades to favor another. Such a Ponte the Sne spent tp, the policy would be unfair and rightfully resented. [ae ice of New Hi women of th state, JUVENILE DELINQUENC Se reducg the burdens of farm life. * Alarming j id issi i i New Hampshire. labors | re] of the Georgia Prison Commission. No attempt is hi aes sae paren grip made to fix responsibil There is merely a statement of | Gey, including ‘Sundays and hol| rather startling facts. * days. Georgia officers find that a majority of those respon-|°4"ts_, kept. by representative A farmers’ wives. for motor car thefts are not out of their teens. * By all means let the women have ‘Reports show prisoners. on the state farm include one |e taste of leisure. f 11 years, two of 12, five of. 13. and thirteen of 14 age thorrer rated a ple for its’ rt Pi tional instituti if, hére for earnest study. Under the trend|They have ocome ‘big business, influence breaking down? ‘The home,| nd are now featured by ome ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE~ ~>°7 7° ee Temporarily Marooned | | | England and Wales had only 200 murders last year. On ~ | | matches. In this simple principle is the obvious way to lower : | As for hunters, their “sport” isn’t worth 10,000 murders hood is close to o And what an es er nt Christmas, not so meas- v nd die in the ¢ | acter pies — pretentious [to become no more auntiess Army H H H ; t i i HOLD CARN CONTEST Frips held in iums totalling i | } {saying to yourself; “Bee is always ywho i highest, a prize of and fifth $1 . second $4, third ackyard PI fourth $2 und fifth $1. Backyard Playgrounds This is the third of a series of 10, for adjustment to the growth wane rlicles on the construction and use vund cquipment adapted to{ maturity, | of. pla | the back yagd. nd kept bolted to the uprights at all ven banks of the Material for iron frame: Two pieces 2-inch pipe, 8 feet long. One piece 1-inch pipe, 5 fect long. Two elbows, one-inche by 2 inches.! Two 2-inch flanges, (Approximate cost, $5.63.) = EE BY W. ©. BAPCHELOR ELECT SUPERINTENDENT | equipment contributes cf Montefiore special feet in concrete. an do the work, sand or sawdust kept under the bar will add to the safety of the swing.| a By erecting a bar in combination | Tesponsibility toward the woman to with a swing frame, the cost may be| reduced from one-third to one-half. Copyright, 1924, by W. C. Batchelor. . Hem, for five years in charge of this school at Anamoose, was elected ture. uperintendent chools for the coming year. action was necessary the resignation of Supt. C. L. Cod-| ‘ding who will be at the head of the Shavings,| An o¥d-fashioned idea, isn't it? accompanying oden frame bar, on account of Two pieces, 4 inches by 4 inches Prof. Hem is an experienced inches by 4 inches well recommended, and is a One pound No. 20 easing nails, ate of the U. of N. D. ,and has three children. Two 1-4-inch b: A recent act of the Alab: 4, “ 4 = | ve zs Bn | Inture permits railwa; already has had her share of fatal accidents this year. | With the advent of Ganada’s cen- heights of 4 f feet. respectiv 4 1-2 feet and 5 in order to allow and give mileage tickets When they sign a treaty in the Balkans it ig usually just for the BY CONDO usals to testify in investigations | prove there is honor among thieves. fDo You KNOW THE OWNER (Or THIS CAR £ catch so few they should watch them nore close- ly. J. Burns, the , has resigned. Being detective, of course he 1s re the days the commence- more careful thought than the commencement al- You can tell spring by the in- medicine advertisments. It is a wise man who looks things over instead of overlooking things. cr of flower culture for in the Maritime Alps, so that may be why the stuff is so high. people would be idle half the time if they had nothing to worry about. , % 3. | the Farm Extension Serv- | When it rains in a country town mpshire to the farm | the streets look as if someone had planted a in them. The extension workers seek ‘o} p crop in the f ri A . ‘ Rouge is d to be going out growth of juvenile delinquency is.shown in the| They find that the average farm | of ae enghs the nae aH is use can be stopped. Fat men don’t stand the heat bet- ter than lean men, but they seem General use of the automobile is given.as a possible| ‘That conclusion was based on| to sit it. out better. About the wordt job on earth is selling cheap cighrs and having @o smoke the samples. HIGH FINANCE SATURDAY MAY 24, 1924 28 MURDERS TODAY By Albert Apple [Ean Ree ne ee SMI " + ° spicans Wi e today it | Twenty -eight “Americans will be murdered these 24 a a run true to average. That many are mur. dered every day—more than 10,000 a year. And:these, mind you, are only the known murders. There must be thousands that are never discovered, particularly in out-of-the-way re- gions. And an unknown number of people who are recorded by the police as having “disappeared” lies under the sod, vic- tims of assa i The vs f only a few. Twenty-eight today! The news will tell you of v, Murder Has become so common in the United States that it is of no more than local interest unless the crime has unusual angles or involves celebri An American is twice as apt to be murdered today as 20 years ago. In two decades the murder rate has doubled, even making allowances for increased population. a strict population basis, we had 25 times as many. And our Tera ter each 1000 population, was three times as black ‘as Italy’s. é i : Dr. Frederick L. Hoffman, of Prudential Insurance Co. , furnishes these figures. ‘ To prevent a child starting fires, you keep him away from the murder rate. ‘ Poison used to be a favorite method of murder. It’s com- paratively rare now—because government has made it hard for the criminally inclined to obtain poisons, especially ones that leave little or no apparent traces. F i The day is coming when the sale of fire arms will be sim- ilarly restricted. With criminals virtually unable to buy pistols, and with a stiff penalty such as life imprisonment for illicit possession of a pistol, the murder rate would drop. ; | For, mark you, the revolver is used in the majority 0: | murders. Local restrictions against its sale are of little avail as long as crooks can buy revolvers from mail order houses. Congress has the power to prohibit interstate traffic in pistols. That power should be exercised. A pistol should be \ sold to none except officers of the law. Householders could | protect themselves with rifles or sawed-off shotguns which { cannot be carried concealed through streets by the criminally | inclined. * Has \ | | | a year. The rifle is all they need, anyway. AieTangle | | LETTER FROM BEATRICE GRIM-| come-tired of me you are now tired ( | SHAW TO RICHARD SUMMERS | of somcone else, and that you will MY DEAR DICK: go through life having a series of I haven't answered your letter un-| rcmantic episodes which will beco til now because I wanted to think] less and less emotionally satisfying about it. I,wanted to think it over| a, time goes on. You sce what | carefully before I committed myself] really am regretting is my ideat of to paper. you. fi) 1 know you are smiling as you The reason I'm saying allithis to jread the first sentence. You are] you, Dick, in this lettery is becausc I cannot make up my mind to put myself in a position where I may be S so serious about everything.” 1 think that is my misfortune, but to] hurt as greatly as you hurt me. me the renewal of our relations, or! You sec, I haven't any particular even our friendship, is a serious] pride in this matter. I do not think thing. it’s a time for pride. I loved you I do not mind telling you that I] deeply. 1 shall. always loye you. thought I would never recover from] But I have grown calloused to the the hurt you gave me in the letter| hurt that you gave me, and I don’t you wrote me before the last. It} want to tear open the wound again. overturned all my ideas of living and| You say no one has rested you. as loving. You see, Dick, I had al-|1, That may be true. But I am ways thought that when a man asks afraid, Dick, that I am not one of a woman to be his wife, he was sure) those women who are content to be rf that he cared for her more than! @ kind of doll which a man plays any one else in all the world; and | with a while and then locks ‘Way in when she told him that she would! burcau drawer while he gdeé’ out be his wife, she set herself apart| ang plays with other dolls until he's quite as much as though already tired, always secure in the knowl- the marriage lines had been read for| edge ‘of what is in that locked draw. her. er he has left behind; always sure that when he wishes to go back he And now I am satisfied that no man | will find his other doll waiting for. ever has any particular feeling of| him, ¥ I'm not old-fashioned enough for that, Dick, although neither have I the modern spirit which can say: “I will love you as long as you love, vhom he is engaged. I don’t just understand why your feelings have turned back to me, Dick. Have you become tired of| and not one minute after.” Miss Perier? Oh, don't shake your] I don’t just know what I'm going head ahd say that you never were! to do, Dick. When I decide, I will in love with Miss Perier, because if| write you again. BEE. you told the truth you would say| (Copyright, 1924, Nea Service, Inc.) that you were absolutely infatuated with her. I hate to feel that you are fickle. I even hate to feel that having be TOMORROW: etter from Sally 5 Atherton to Mrs. Johesph Graves Hamilton, “Take a good look!” called Cutie. Re enenlesha Zee) chateving bes | Manatee, 7: PSSA aha ag eet ADVENTURE OF “I'm running off. I'm going to sea.” THE TWINS “Watch out for the waves!” called Sammy. “They're as high as church BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON ||stceple ae venta “Waves yourself! I'm no baby,” “Oh, ho!” cried Cutie Cottontail‘| called Cutie. “Now I'm,a sailor and I'm going to| On went the little boat until it nea came to the river. _ He had gone to Mister Bags’ store| “Here's the. sea!” thought Cutie in the woods for’a pound of lard,|happily. “I don't see any pirates, and on his way home he had stopped | or whales, or waves. I'm glad I at the creek and dumped out the|came! Who's afraid?” lard and made -a boat out of the| The river got wider and a wind little wooden thing it came in. came up. Little waves begin to He put a piece of paper up for a/ splash over the edge of the lard. sail and jumped in, and away he|holder boat. ‘Cutie could see land went. : no longer as this was the place the Cutie was a’ very, very little yrab- r emptied into the sea. bit boy, the biggest part of “him] “I want to go home” he. wailed being his pink ears. | And the little |"1 was only fooling all the time. boat bore him along very fast. T wish I was back home with mama. 4 “My, .dsn't the, world :big!” the | And I'm hungry. I’ wish I had some crivd- “I've never been so far away | fried carrots. Oh, my!” from’ home. before.” ' Suddenly there was a sound in The little creek carried, him along, | the air and Catie felt himself lifted aney from the forest and through up like a feather. Just in time, too, valley toward ‘the ‘iver, Crouch &|for a, big ae ee “Hello,” he called to Jimmy Jay,| Cate yen ne aes torn it went. pakins for mosquitoes, along the his Pineeee Bee one te yank. im? Oh, 3 q ap isllot” called. Jimmy, “Where, eS a Le Pee ae Bags, the fairyman, telephoned to a ve i » to watch o} i - sree out for whales,” laughed | bit’ boy. And heed te teats ny? : .__ [eagle that rescued him: panne he passed Charley King- I don't Bee Mrs. Cot- Mellel? called Clie * {fen Tail ever got her lard or not, “Hello!” called Charley. “Where | “°"' SUPPose she did. are you going?” t “I'm going to sea!” answered ______ le Cutie loudly, : A Tho h “Oho!” whistled Charley. “Wateh | @——————-. uae | $4 out for pirates.’ it f The wicked flee when no man Pirates yourself! I'm not afraid,” 4 Naktenes oo 'veta called Cutie, ‘sticking: his pink ears wea Hom titte fighteous ped fdbward to} shiow how brave ke was, _ eet : The Next, person he.,passed was Wickedness m: I'm going ay prosper.. for 2 BERTIE—When old Goldbag mar- the school and the ‘chiureh niust extend the corrective, in- ah SOUR tg our very. be: Tet ‘ i = th ried Flo, why did she say she was SYLVIA—She made a discount for|“WHat. (aye. swored — . Sammy. | killed your:mantaiis | pie of child-! sh.—Tit-Bits, ei Sammy, Snipg,,wading near the sh ile. —L) ie tha’ paitfnaeding ar the shore | while,—L'Estran, “Hello!” called. Cutie. “What are PROCRASTINATI 2 ello!” called, Cutie, iON you doing?’ 7 - ‘sul doin EASTERNER—I’ ‘suppose there?” ou Woing Iawayi out] BORED WESTERNER—| x : « [long tine tite ib oe atin a

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