The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 6, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER leaped upon him and administered a terrific =a ishment. But only the first was paroled, i | ee ! Some More THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE of the Same I Survey of the Philippines i Col. Carmi Thompson has been designated by ; Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | President Coolidge to make a complete survey of (Established 1873) Hey A uy Set Riskett eae postoffice at economic conditions in the Philippines. The inves- George D. Mank..........Peaaent ank Publisher | tiation will include a comprehensive inquiry into the general progress of the Filipinos, their educa-; {tional system, industrial pregress and the general ped “fal welfare of the people. | A report of this kind from one of impartial mind 6.00 | and wholly disinterested should guide the adminis- .. 6.00; tration in shaping future policies affecting the lislands. Some of the best friends the Philippines Member of The Associated Press | have think that independence now would be a blow The Associated Preas is exclusively entitled to the | t future development. use for republication of all news dispatches credited| The special survi it is explained, is no reflec- to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also | 4; ie eral | the local news of spontaneous origin published here- ies loetl al el ed lias otasl Eh tell in. All rights of republication of all other matter | Wood, although in some quarters it has been con- strued as such. Col. Thompson, however, is a close herein are also reserved, “Foreign Representatives {friend of Col. Wood. He served as President Taft's | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY secretary, tie United States treasurer and Assist i CRICAGO DETROIT | #nt Secretary of the Interior and should be wll} Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | cauipped for the mission. i We BURNS AND SMITIL = oF iipas dase Seamneaicot ' Seon Fifth Ave. Bldg. | Keeping the Judiciary Clean (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Judgment must be suspended until all the testi- | mn |mony in the Judge English impeachment trial is} placed before the Senate. The overwhelming vote Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year............- Daily by mai Daily by ma (in st Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation per year, (in Bismarck)... The Art of Lynching This is the age of the radio, but its use should be| for impeachment in the House indicates that the ac- | extended. Aside from entertainment, why not in-|cusers must have made out a case against the! troduce a practical lessen into the home now and | jurist. { then? Impeachment is an extreme remedy and only to For instance, some little incident that would | be used as a last resort. The House judiciary cem- | show how America progressed since the days | mittee recommended impeachment after hearings | of Diocletian or the Spanish Inquisition. A lynch-|and investigaton. Only 62 Representatives rallied | ing might turn the trick. | to Judge English’s defense and the vote taken was | Seventeen persons were the victims of lynching in | nonpartisan in character. the United States last year. That’s an increase} Speedy action to clear up charges against the ju- | over the record of 1924—only cne more to be sure, | diciary serves fo heighten respect for judges. Th» | but it shows progre No particular section of thc | House has acted in the only way possible for there | country is exempt; there are only three states where-| san be no connivance where even a suspicion of | in there never has been a lynching. ‘ corruption is Pesta { Couldn't some arrangement be made whereby CT ATE Heart Disease Heart disease claims more than 200,000 lives aj year. Dr. Louis I. Dublin, chief statistician of the Met- lynehings be broadcast? The American home is crying for some such diversion as this. A woman in New York cenfessed to the charge of swindling. She had passed a bad check for $ in a Fifth avenue store. The judge sentenced her to Auburn prison. “Don’t send me to Auburn,” was her plea. “T] would rather die than go back to Auburn after the | faith those people showed in me. They were s° kind.” i She will be sent to another penitentiary, on Wel- last few years. It is hoped that through a vigorous campaign, public attention can be focused upon ‘heart disease as it is now upon tuberculosis. The anti-tubereu- losis societies throughout the nation have done A THRE! = WERED know he has been all the time since te ame, that girl “Lola Lawrence voice rose to al- most a shriek as she she said that fare Island. The sentence there may be longer, a£| much to lower fatalities from the white plague. id pues: es ee : 4 i ” . . eer ly s ght, swered 3 the maximum is greater. That's up to the parole) Doubtless a national educational and alleviative | yfadame Seria, easiie, “Yous dant hoard. She’s taking the chance. Her shame may | campaign will aid greatly. | have to see her, Miss Lawrence. I'll it. is up to you. i st give orders that she’s not to he honest. She deserves the benefit of the doubt. | a ust ive orde lose my own Pas | “giander” on the air is a new offense breughi! you're in the hot out from mys! Melba Morton. She'll model for yon. “‘No, that won't do at That Irish girl will be sure to ¢ her- self known some way. 1 quite certain that she sang tha song the other day because she knew that Bud- dy Tremaine was with me and she knew how insane he is over a new voice.” “I could not help wondering wi Madame Se Ja would say to this f she must have remembered that she had made the plan to have me sing so that Mr. Tremaine would hear me, herself. and A recent census report shows that farm land in the United States decreased in value 31 per cent be- tween 1920 dnd 1925. The total value in 1925 was estimated at 37,779 millions of dollars, compared with 64,829 millions in 1920. Despite this bic shrinkage, the 1925 valuation was 33 per cent above that of 1910. But it gives.an idea of what the buy- cr.of farm lands has gone through in the last five years, about by the radio. An announcer was recently fined $25 for uttering falsehoods relative to State’s Attorney Crowe of Cook county, Minos. cause of whim.’ some and hug as much could, her kindnes Latest reports put the gross public debt at more | than twenty-billion. The field fer the Coolidge brand of economy is still large. ticular attention to had spoken th Learning to drive slowly seems t> be harder than than learning to drive fast. | Editorial Comment | A Great and Kindly Man (Chicago Journal of Commerce) Luther Burbank, now critically il} in his home at Santa Rosa, Calif., is a man whom all the world getting tired of my voice, Do you knows to be great. On this point there is no veice |~ = oer of dissent. His greatness was demonstrated a long time ago; during most of his lifetime the fact has | been accepted. In this, and in some other respects, TWINS e he resembles Thomas A. Edison. These two men have become historical figures in their own lifetime. OLIVE ROBERTS RADSG TATTERS WANDERS INTO FAIRYLAND dollars. “Now, however, I Can You Trust Men? You doen't know whom you can trust these days, do you? ’ Every fellow out for himself, willing to cut. under you for his own personal gain. Well, let’s get out of here. Go somewhere where you can trust your fellow man. But it’s a bad night to go out. Dark, stormy and windy. What's that big line overhead? Oh, merely a high tension wire with enough electricity in it to kill hun- dreds of persons. But you didn’t think a thing of walking under it. You knew that the lineman had made it safe. Now we'll get in a taxi and ride to the station. Got to hurry, if we’re to catch the train. This fel- low certainly knows how to drive. Takes a steady hand to keep out of a crash, but we'll not worry already I had hea: flounce out of the “f\ rushed over silky uu ink Miss Riley has; voice? I wasn't paying very much attention to it the other day.’ “‘Of course she has a voice and) you can make up your mind that she knows it, just as she knew that the q est way to catch Buddy Tre- maine would be to sing for him. She might even have,known that he is ~ somewhat incohere I tried to tell her Lawrence. “She pulled me. put her arms ar (Copyright, 192 TOMORROW: | wards that it w a meal themselves, and potatoes, pieces of meat who “1 think I'll save | presently. tum, yum ‘ould you At the core of Burbank’s greatness, cf course, is a genius for the work he has undertaken. His love si “Oh, shouldn't a about that. Shs __ | for plants is a part of this genius. His tremendous se nem, meow, Hees Wael Weel! | oo aalae Bymp! Big hole in the street. Terrific strain | industry has given his genius an opportunity to dem-|poked “his nove around the little |tovseratch so much on the springs and the car. But nothing breaks. Sweating men at forge and lathe had done their work well. The others who fastened the nuts and holts when the car was assembled did their work. We trust our lives to them whenever we ride in a fast car. Well, here we are at the station. We crawl into our berths and go peacefully to sleep. The train plows on through the dark and storm. One man at the throttle holds the lives of hundreds in his hands. Water stégams against the glass through which he peers out at the right of way. One signal missed and destructién awaits. But we sleep on. Yet some other man, a nonenity in the cosmic scheme, has seen to it that all signal lights are burn- ing. And other obscure toilers who have repaired the track that day have gauged it and fastened it in its onstrate its powers. Seventy-seven years old now, he can look back fifty-three years to the time cf his first famous origination, the Burbank potate. Since ¢ shiver so hard that he almost cial” that time he has developed many hundreds of new Re his big book with the names | silk.- varieties of trees, grains, grass, fruits, vegetables, flowers, and nuts. His work has had a vast and im- mediate practical value. In addition, it has afforded biologists an unprecedented opportunity for the study cf tha development of life-forms. Mr. Burbank’s sympathies have not gone out to plants alone. His kindly nature delights in man- kind. His smile is a benediction. The glow in his eyes is an outer sign of his inner zest for life. Let us hope he will live. Well, my dears, secret bush that hid the path to! t) Tatters was really Serub. Land. larch Hare began to tremble| “I'd like to know what he’s doing here.” “Bow, wow, wow! Woof! Woof!” went Tatters again. This time a little | nearer, “Quick, Mister Rubadub, can you hide me?” said the poor March Hire. ‘Jump into that soap box ther: ; and open the gate and let him i | “He sounds like a nice kind Ae “I don't believe he’d hurt Middle-Age Out of a Job (Ohio State Journa)) We have received a half-humorous, half-patheti should say \v aie a then, lower was not,” said a tiny; d ‘there sitting | imble Toes, the | proper place. Our lives have been held in their |ietter from a woman who is out of a job, solely be-| this'doe and he's a fine lane grimy hands. cause, she is convinced, she is past 40 years old and i: he has no home. All he wants is to And so it goes. Every day we trust our lives to | hop hair is about gray. She has had 16 years ex- aor ald Nimble Tees 'How-do-you- | our. fellow men, men in far-off places, men whom we never see, men who in the routine of their breadwin- ning are their brothers’ keepers. Oh, yes, there are some men you can trust! se perience in an important branch of office work.| - ae larch mare jumped ay of ithe oap box as quick a tt Her former positions she lost fér reasons not reflect - | srords, looking Hee a wink: St. nen | ing in any way upon her ability or her personality. | eet Fat lad to hear it,” he ex-j a claime rabbits must be a For months she has been trying hard tc get a new | Tavat sicanee tors, houwer, scare: | place, but all the office managers she has interviewed | do lose our dignity. “Open the gate, prefer to employ younger women. Res oe She says she would be willing to bob her hair, | ease aie ig an ad opened “brown-a-tone” it; wear flapper clothes, even smoke ! ay ne Howdy-do ‘folks,” he cigarettes, cr, if these devices did not bring satis- | white ee peal shegee jail his factory results, to do her work behind a sereen wher:/ Are there any nobody would see her. She is sure she could do tha: | ae a feaia o tinit ooid i work better, if she could only find the chance, than | | Rubadub. 5 sai deter most young and comparatively inexperienced wom- But suddenly to the amazement of aA none io tae wp eh ica | everybody, there stood « large shiny tin pan right in front of Tatt This is ‘a familiar problem and a sad one. It af-| nose. And on the an ee fects both sexes. In the case-of an aging man the | helping of juicy roast heef, cut up | employer often feels, with some reason, that he i ee wae FEBee, ow would rather take a young fellow likely to stay | 50 ". faae. feathed potatoes and longer as one of the organization, to grow up with it, Ht ih ier eile (pis naa ast as it,were. This objection to the employment of a|,.4 Titale tinkling laugh came from A || middle-aged person does not hold to so great. an ex- | mombnt b Rote. Foe tern ai bg the case of a ie a |e “disappeared, wand, wings iri y a fe don't know what to advise our correspondent, who is up against one of the stern realities of this Ped tthe delicious Sinner” Bad sometimes discouraging life, except to keep on ex-| ertng every effort to eta job, By and by she will dy Mister ubadute wioing th run across some sensible potential empleyer whos? a right in, sir!” chief requirement of feminine employes ia that ‘they Had Fd Malis Atala oe ‘wilting. to, de. thein.work well. snd Nick and be Marg eNaeey Hare areas after: Nearly all the angles of the World War have been »exploited, but here is an entirely new one—the wa‘ saved many lives. That is upon the authority of Dr. Charles M. Mayo. eries in medical surgery during the war, Dr. Mayo says, has resulted in the saving of as many lives. as were lost upon the battlefields. When it is'‘considered that 45,000 doctors from America were ‘drawn to the fields of action, and there took their ‘*popt-graduate” work, the statement does not seem STOP bones buried here- strange. The best medical thought of Europe and America ‘and operated during the war, resulting in 4 ene for beg: profogeion as a whole. . vopolitan Life Insurance Company, reports a stead:’ | increase of mortality from this source. The Amer- ; ican Heart Associaticn has been organized to direct attention to the increase of this disease within the | Girl of Today elf-respect if I allowed ourageous little girl to she had done anything wrong, “Julie, Julie, I wanted to go out pected. She had never paid any par- she j Be a after: 1 had sung for her that | orning and she gave me the fifty | 7 ing her a great deal of mone: dropping on my knees I begged her, her to lose such a good client as+Miss The Reason Why. | hungry fellow licking up the gra and “I know a _iovely place to Mister Rubstub, A good lathering of “Fairyland Spe- | soap made his coat look like | “1 heard Mrs. Greenway say she pariy. RPE | EVERETT TRUE SACES MEN IN. HGRE, AND SOME UKE YOU t reenway did take him} e saw him and Tatters talking about her frie that must nds of the dogs, too! %. (To Be Continued) WG: opyright,_ tvice, Inc.) | awnoucaT They are passed away as the iene ships; as the e that hasteth to’ his prey.—Joh 9 26. \ i ge, | must lose | But I would | because hop, not but} selfish woma is the greatest of tyrants. | As go on toward age, he’ taxes our health, limbs, fe jello strength of Madame as UT! ang featur John ss Was so unex- 1 don’t think words to me CORPORATIONS | 4 ’ Grand Forks Community Chest, a know T was cost-| Non-profit organization for the sup- for | port of charitable and character build- rd Lola Lawrence |ing agene Directors listed were room. W. A. McIntyre, G. L. Ireland, J. W. Wo Madame and | Wilkerson, 1 Vold, Cod. Murphy, W. H, Schuize, M.D. Knox, Henry ntly to Jet me go. Holt, Mrs. M. G, Benner and I. Paper- that.I didn’t want master, ' Teipesabaree and Road Conditions | i (Mercury readings at 7 a.m.) Bismarck--Cloudy,: 24; roads good. St. Cloud—Cloudy; 28; roads: good. Fargo--Snowing, 27; roads guod. pees Light «snow, 30; roads good. he one edneatown Cloudy, 30; e Grand Forks good. thought” oe | | Minot Snow 0 we,| Fads oo won't have voMibbing——Cloudy, 26; roads fair. Mandan—Snow 'Quring night; cloudy, 29; roads good. Duluth—-Cloudy, 27; roads good, Winona-—Fine. snow, 30; roads bad. Rochester—Light snow, 29; roads her and up b | | }-- better than cating to see the poor! swallowin:s: le. my bone,” the | roads Thab was goo nice bath roads 30; Can Snowing, 30; . during night, it. then.” under all his dirt, a beautiful dog. FUMES OF WILD, ; MIXTURE ee | paradise, with neither kith nor kin, i gotten her jnto a predicament that | over my story perhaps your thiraty | Wve ‘stories ;¢lon from a Mrs. Nap Adams, who 1 peck station. ;rlan wading that half mil Beato TUESDAY, ‘APRHU6, 1926 Barbara Brown, beautiful as an Orientals dream of a polygamous ewiny a four weeks’ boatd vill— and with just one dime—arrives at @ New Year's party, cotd, wet, hun- man, ostensibly a guest, “out actual. Jy the host, notices her, and grufty ene notice to this effect to the aeteas, the handsome, Nan Adams. Barbara, put to: bed to recover from her cold, awakes to find her- self owner of theegorgeous little pouse. \ Now go on with the ba Declaration of Tnidafieridines he keyhole had not been large enough for Hannah to see the con- teuts of Barbara's lette: They ‘would have interested her a bit and Bardimao.s great deal. “Dear Papa: “Your check did not come, Per. baps At was not sent. Vhatever the cause, the reduc: tlon of your devoted daughter’ hank account to one thin dime after sanch yesterday was fateful. Ithas & passing strange. “It ‘your paternal heart doesn't yearn (L very much doubt it will!) Smagination will. You always did “1 atéepted a-New Year's invita- vat next. to me-at the Christmas matinee of,a new play. I didn't know udtil too late that her coun- try house is a half mile from Rye- “Picthre your penniless Barba- through freezing snowdrifts—her skirts, for safety (theirs, not mine), over her thowldess The keyhole had not been large mough for Hanna to gee the con- lente: of Barbara's letter. “Now I have a cold and a hou {t's @ nice house, with all-over pet on all the floors. My room is Beorgi: The. price,.of course, is yery steep—but payment is de- jow, papa, I-want you to under stond thoroughly. “I am not going to ask you for eympathy or for money. But want 49 be understood, 1 guess every ‘woman does. “Mrs. Adama was iastalled here by J. B. Hardiman. . Between: last night and -this morning her lease en this house, and on Hardiman, expired. [ only to stand up and look .at the reflection in my eheval glass to find the reason. “By the way. someone told me chat ) children of-lovers are the most beautifyl.’ Were you and mother mids gpa “What of ‘it? erawl that. 'H tetl you what of ft. I can't walk @ street without some damn 1 cam hear you flido’t: paw.or snort, in his eyes. ‘Those.eyes bought me. “Why shouldn't 1 sell? Don't vhink me maudlin it [ ens with one tear. It's.a tear for home chat went smash four years ago when you went away without so much as the customary note on the bedroom pin-cushion to explain. “It's a tear for poor foolish. mam- ma, paying too much for being aj ¥' bore when she died alone fast year in a Chicago hote} room. Haye you eard of that yet, papa? “ “And. it’s a tear. for the little gtrl who, in boarding school and board- éng house, has been lonely and con- fused ever since. “T have lived-a lot since that day, papa. I have lived enough to pene to some sort of understanding of your reasons for abando: moth- er. You: wanted to get away from all the responsibility that a rite, bd Fr eu and a home involved, You} ® waited, perhaps many - years, an opportunity. or an. excuse to me pe i, “It never came, .o iy pe just made an pueerieaty: You grabbed a toothbrush “Parents seem to thi that they ie ia ak a secrets from e cl oan of apps edi m i hghogy> isNobody * Pd yey! itt ut National Pictures Ine. ‘on hotel clerk sent the telegram telling of mamma's {Ilo 1 don't kuow why. she was in Chicago. I think «fe: to meet a detective there. | kuow she bhd’an agency hunting for you. I traveled all aloné to Chicago, and strangers there told me that mamma had died. “Did you ever have to deal with an undertaker? Ora coroner? Or the superintendent of a cemetery? 1 did. 1 didn't even have time to cry. ‘I've had no time to cry since. T've had to'do 6o many things. And I've bad to deal with so many peo ple.’ Every one of them cheated me. “Some of them were affable, some of them were grouchy. Some short and fat; some Beg a lean. Bus got very “poor.” 1 got terribly confused. - “But I'm cot confused any longer, 1 know exactly what [ shall dco soe can treat me just as if 1 wera a boy—why aot? Your neglect ‘s t, magnificent. | embrace your philosophy of roving irrespon- sibility. l°embrace your code of the care-free a should I ha @ boy at 20—my vite and health? “And why should I have less? “Lam ready for this adventure.: Hardiman shall own of ne just} what he cap take. i shall stay here; You've left me at ie, lt cling off. You're a hobo, fi hobo. “Cali tié a Shebo ang your true daughter, nomad dad.” Barbara's pen was traveling fe ver fast, iu rhythm with the pulse which leaped to her courageous definition of her secret soul: a ‘vous foot tapped impatiently for the words of her next sentence. “I want. life as badly as you eve>. wanted It. “Remember now those momenis of your life just before you slam-i med the doer which freed you of} mother and me. Just so | wish toi be freed of the bonds of convention tied at birth to every baby so ua- fortunate as to be born a girl. ‘And if I'm beaten or if 1 ep don't say to me: “‘Never darken my door! “You haven't got a door. Nex ther have |. And when I get ap from this desk I'm going to ualock ae ouly door between me and tr~u le. “Goodby. papa. “You've done dirt, bug damme eyes if ! can help liking ’ you for It! Your— a * “SHEBO.” . oe © ee Barbara queened on the autemo- bile porch. Her back was ight .: The red feather in her No more jaunty than the Ff small head and slender shoulders, ' But within she was craven. Tke weeks of voluntary imprisonment in J. B. Hardiman's Ryeneck bou had told on her pride. Day by: da. her bravado: had Increased. Aud her bravery had diminished. - The minor problems of her pas® ing days didn't Yother her. She knew just bow to handle them. From the oyster forks to the pre cise inflection with which to aé @ groom she was letter per fect as chatelaine of her manse. But. they had not thught her te boarding achool how to handle ° paying lover. on killed the afternoon riding wooded road in Westchestes anoth r mounts simultaneow “Hello, Miss Brown!” The cool voice was Nan Agee, Barbara heard berself stammeriog, From the first time since she had absconded ° fro! Forty-sev; enth street fo Riyeneck a : ae the acute ensation of actuay mount; lifted its heae Barbara's nd nozsied the elder woman's eek recognised me.” parred 6 recognized me,” Ni softly. “We used to be ireat ‘pals: " Barbara sought her casual, cor rect, amiable tone. She found ih self instead blurting: “Look here, Mrs. Adam: Don't look at me that way!” She shook bari para py! her eens shied. 8. er palpi 8 the mi ants: at know at you. wel ¥ Dothing to him.” od Se tea oe Sg i dear child!” Mrs, Adami Yo. oa roeit snorthe hokeon 4 mustn't excli , “You know moat ts I meant" Ban bara’s voice lowered to an ugly note. “You'd no'right to invite me as your: ak quired. Sol a too ingenuous. @ frenzy, my daar” fere, you may be sath: Ne. let J. B. have what he wan 4 ” n “want patted your ol@ ee at “3 ‘om Es a‘heipans ag Se money! ecrve ee a ety ee oe “Friends of Mra. Nin hard put to it these Ate we month the c tained by (or cogs ie me Pc manda calenat aint the. ‘vane :

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