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{| PAGE FOUR The™ lism is a queer quirk of thought. Shake- Bismarck Tribune spearehad a good idea in mind when he said: An Independent Newspaper “There's nothing either good or bad but thinking THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER makes it so.” If we think a thing hard enough, the! (Established 1873) mind becomes obsessed. Fatalism may be fatal. | 1 | SO dance ie ROO Pas i ae Sonmeny, What Will the Men Wear? _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HER OWN WAY and entered at the postoffice at | A DAMNING PAGE | .“'T don't quite understand,’ { an-rall. In fact, I am not sure, that I = jiemarck, as second class mail matter. Booth Tarkington, who writes very fine plays and} | “I pulled 1 Judy, away from) swered. ‘Beside, 1 think there is a} would have known it myself.’ WHAT HAS HAPPENED IN No one dare ask it! She thought of George D. Mann. +President and Publisher | jooks, declares that the skirt, as an article of wom. | BAFfY Cornwall's grasp. A kind of| penalty for blackmail’ | BA htt ti reetinodartrh Feber THE STORY SOFAR: =~ | Murillo as he had’ come rushing Gehecription Rates Payable en's apparel, will have disappeared entirely within | ""Let'me gor asides nesa of the wolce that spoke that sen: [into hia erael eyes I concluded that! Sandy MeNell, forced Sy her, lm: | Hebi are leaped. Her mother ee Pay ance » f . - a . ™m ha mh WO years. hi in your com-| tence. 1 didn't know I had so much|1 was mistaken. At least the pity Poverienn! Beni in * (Sten italia Ag gee 120) « ts " pi Mr. Cornwall, your needs mean | nerve. . was not for me, a te sacrifices her love for Timm: provoked ‘There is no-real reason why it should continue | nothing to fie, I said. ‘You are a/ “‘I’m in a jam, Barry confessed, T still cannot shales ATTY, | childhood sweetheart. Frequent gs 2 And she had quietly, Par oar to exist,” he says. “I expect to see the time when | Perfect stranger to and I am not | ‘where I must rigk even that, how you expect to get that money/ rus follow. A son is born, dying| self-righteously demanded that San- ite outside Bismarck). 6.00 4 in the habit of handing out fifty| “He stopped to light a cigaret, and! from me.’ almost immediately. Seeking gome dy give a life-long promise; sign outside of North 6,00| all women will habitually wear garments that are| thousand dollars upon “quest from| I noticed that his hands did not trcm-| ‘How much will you give me for) escape, Sandy appeals to her Uncle} sway hex right to every sacredness " 9 it { ” strangers just because they have] bie. that page on the register of The to take a Hono-| —every joy. Member Audit Bureau of Cireulation ee ee wee eee dme for it! ““eyou were more courageous than| Woodland Inn? Pik eis sheiied Dee is Ne ee | oe Terai ot ac ean ‘Member of The Associated Press + The element of modesty, Tarkington holds, does 1 ae nies Moe! Sulit tg the q theeadt con eel peveeres @ “‘What page? T asked wondering-| meets mon Worth, who gaves her now seemed i “ A man’s face and what I saw there con-| ed, ‘an: lieve it o1 hi i e \s steam- The Associated Preas is exclusively entitled to the| Ot enter into it at all. “Modesty consists in con-| femeg my words. {twas a compiete| in’ love with you than, ever. But| “He could not meet my eyes as he| ut hone gut during the voyage, de- tion of all news dispatches credited | formity to accepted rules. And immodesty is de. ranger who stood in front of me.jeven at that I do not love you) sai he page upon which is writ-! wares hi Some “geet ae ie de- hes his love. rwine credit in thi also | fi: ” The eyes lo down into mine] enough to spend the next ten years| ten ‘Barry Cornwall and wif Murillo sh it be freed. Seth a Gen | were cruel slits in his menacing face] of life in prison, which I will prob-| “I felt my Knees grow weak, Judy.| clares he will, never release her. Il rights of republication of ai other matter| Before accepting Tarkington's theory that the | through telat ae slitsering _ abl Rant No) ee ai h/t i the way you wrote it? UlLater he Intercepts, letter from ii that narrow a in’t intend to do this, Joan,’| asked. Sandy. mon tele- are also reserved, _| Women will wear the same apparel as men, we shall nae siti | didnt for had things been! (Copyright, 1926, NEA. Service, tne.) | Semon toting where he may address \first want to know what the men will wear. Not! ‘You're mistaken, Joan,’ said this| different I think I could e gives the number of a private made 9 — . man. ‘It does mean’ almost as much! you a good husband and you would] TOMORROW: Barry Cornwall's! nostoffice box she has rented, | never have known this side of me at | Wife. wrote that he would meet - = certain evening on the beach. Go bN wita tHe STORY A r Ghé moved into the shadows—black, |‘ Eive up my whole life! en jing, athrob with the boom A ‘otal of the sea, Leaning over the rail] The low boom of the waters be- G tngaten COMPANY jevery woman can wear a pair of knickers without DETROIT | causing a riot. And not one of them ever looked to you as it does to me.’ Kresge Bldg. | well in long trousers. ‘ How They Voted on Co. Commissioners An official of a bakery men’s organization solemnly announces that the health of American women is suffering because they’re all trying to|' George F. Will poll d more thi we T she could just make out their dark/c&™me prolonged, solemn ominous., A Word of Thanks get thin. They'd be better off if they sietives to| two tovone vate over his ment, scala Liat stared downward, atill,| 7he,derkness thickened. Sandy grew. With the vote in Burleigh ractically com- ; . Edw. G. Patterson, for Burleigh | Senator ‘my rightened: Such a vast quiet i e vote in Burleigh county pi y be just slightly plump, he says. ming and 7 és tie » he says. county commissioner from the first} Short Term wat palsise about her. She pleted, The Tribune leads in the race for official! Highly interesting, if true, But it would sound| district, returns from the primary|Hanna .......149 147 118 166 175 121 7% 119 9% 48 1216 tected hy the good, | whispered: me? So paper. The management through this column de-|y tittle better if it didn’t come from someone en-| {lection show. 's total vote in . 87 66 7 103 126 161 102 7 93 96 1087 walls, "She ‘breathed quickly, | Set! 9) Ene have wouldn't sires to thank its readers and many friends who sup- ; A rl ‘i ee ee ne to 35 26 «39 «60 St (55 118 75 50 «88 «G67 | thrilling with a sense of terror—| Co, nono’ 4 ne, that she i y ‘ gaged in the business of selling fattening goods, trict was 1,332, while Patterson's vote | gen, high, exultant terror. < wea ie. she was afraid to pérted the newspaper so loyally. was 671, Both men will go on the] Tong ‘Term / he, had. run Inte | it—into th min . vatrehe thire commissioner atateet,| Manna «...01 181 172 186 926 190 87 163 97 . 60 1492) Freq and lintenlng-—vividly her exeltomant—a sudden over: fiifence and endorsement. R Oscar Backman received 377 votes} Midtbo .......... 2 tt 38 1 8 iting for bim, expecting him to | whelming desire to ‘put ber. hands : eae ic Editorial Comment while his opponent, im Prieke,| Nye... 68 94 118 135 162 114 91 95 90 1042 | over her face and ee tele é received 297, Both will likewise go] Stone 3 22 47 «458 «(26 «G1 118 «677 «53 ORC e waited she thought of Ju. com| » isolation 9 Importance of the Press on the November ballot. Congress words: . “The great love—if er lives. An economic study of daily publications by a] For a Midwest Chamber of Commerce Commissioner Axel Soder was! Graham .......73 64 83 986 111 182 120 122 79 109. 979 eeate thing oie ser deena he wait—Oh if he-would Néw York bank shows them as the chief instru- (Chicago Tribune) [nominated for reelection in the rill. 242 206 $87 M68 277 203 187 208 160 199 2112) MEN, TUNE NS rei, eres ay or | come new in this moment of feveriah ment of cooperation and the very nerves of our! ‘There are sincere and respectable differences of wlthough there were a few scatter-| 4 199 1725 | foxey 48% One eee rine his arms visualized him, tall, sdeial system. In addition, they constitute almost} opinion in regard to the efficacy or economic ba ges thd te tevin nol aed dis: jovern .... Cte, eae Bea 8 6. 8. B1]to the winds! Sandy closed her eyes, eee Sauge Bho sid ee dersat cig example of complete cooperation, Ax the| soundness of the McNary-Haugen agricultural sur- | tricts was as follows: : OTHI@ sess * 106-1878 | ai rat We aca vatittine ceelte: ly: ere him!” and closed New York Times says, “the newspaper is in itself} plus control measure, but the vote that defeate:i | Lieut. Gov. fs iking with impetuous tears: acremarkable example of voluntary cooperation. wide crete! Kelsh ...........190 186 167 207 207 135 140 108 92 1564 + pee the wait! He might have it was primarily a sectional vote. So far as the! Patterson Will | Maddock theoretical differences are concerned there j 2" ward Ist pe. ... 50 251 | ee, of State m 2nd ward, 2nd pe. 271 a was well reasoned and authoritative opinion on | 4th ward 177 | Byrne A, 169 | O'Le 168 both sides. The i: i di {6th ME te at sides. ie issue did not divide conservative war tor] Beate wir 75 127 130 170 199 169 173° 121. 151 1476] ue wanted love like that. As Judit ited it. More-— 104 141 146 203 207 185 161 188 107 1476 | beacuse she know the insuipportable | shentyetedow 165 168 196 181 133'J55 153 99 136 Not only is it a complex fabric woven of the labors agd abilities of hundreds within its plant and of thousands on the outside, but it usually is a part of one of those great associations of newspapers w moved—one great long 1534| emptiners of, the heart and. mind| craven ,woving down the pler, like from radical, for there: were able conservatives | 6th ward, Ist pe. . bg bapeheyh the holy emo- “watched it in breathless ; 6th ward, 2nd pe. 126 & in ought : through which the news of the world is daily gath-|like Vice President Dawes, ex-Gov. Lowden and cc . 26 held _ 229 ane a P Ate rd 4 ue if oH Ha ag _ to —_ i, this. sanbaate’ ‘Acticin tart ered, exchanged and made available to all.” the disinterested British economist, Sir Josiah | Fore Rie 221 St. Treasurer 7 sudden! iy whispered: “nr nt it! bed ae ‘ And certainly it is not less significant and surely| Stamp, in favor of the surplus control plan, a8| Lincoln .. Fisher . 112 157 169 207 216 180 196 140 139 1657) nave Imperiously as sh A: pt eos heey wit'siosa as important as the triangular cooperation beweer: : 163 186 172 175 120 111 119 91 109 1846 | demanded in her girlhood; when she | “On!” against the President and his formidable secretary ee Creek . of the treasury opposed to it. Boyd ictured herself ene born for joy and| Ty, publisher, advertiser and public. If it should cease, down thi 111 1815] wind blowing a newspape! 220 34 1599! So she wowld leaye now. “She would 297 Nelson . 138 86 90 1234 = back to that big, silent room of|in a sweet, er ‘ing oblivion. : rs. She would stand at the wi She" had. waited once. for Tim 11 28 2% 36 21 19 22 v devenaiy. 103.60 22 61 497 19 105 moves with ‘effective harmony in the practical | South W field of legislation. When its important common interests are involved it is wide awake and well unified. It is not caught napping. It does not Coolidge Will : weaken or defeat itself by internal dissension. Leavé Capital making him acutely conscious of the doings, the nweds, the desires and the accomplishments of his fellow humans all over the world. It widens the mental horizon, it broadens the understanding; it promotes knowledge—this «great project of the Total ... 43 . ses a8s he had every night for these six| taking his kiss light); rr te * ly, joyoualy, ieee oct ay Ta But now her senses sang. Fi a! he said: a we bad “Ramon—oh—you camel This seem. ec .. The midwest will always be ineffective in impos- 66) 116 < 777 about y i ed wohderful—and abo i Printing of news. 3 : re 4 8 88)" Sh ‘ 9 —ai ve all things It is of course true that modern life has ‘created|i"& upon national policy a proper regard for its Next Wednesday QB 1888 | She remembered. Allee crying herselt | Peautiful cha ap vr erga a « the modern newspaper, but who can gainsay the interests while we remain sectionally disorgan- —_ ‘to’ sleep. .\Long time ago. Sandy each of ‘8 Washington, July 2—()—Unless present plans are changed President Coolidge will leave for his summer home in the Adirondacks late next Wednesday, arriving, at White Pine Camp Thursday forertoon. ized, with no adequate agencies for developing a sense of our common western needs, with no west- ern cohesion of thought or act. In the past we have subsided into economic interests, although these interests are vitally interdependent, The Sr =F western farmer, the western railroad manager, the Kentucky Boy Wins ~ = a ttemendous part the modern newspaper has played in the development of modern civilization, in the swift and sure evolution of intelligent progress? One does not have to be a newspaper enthusiast to ne and admit the vast amount of constructive good they have accomplished nor can one adequately , was a dittle girl then. @ used to a i o Ott pet hex arma about ‘Ally snd whis-| here’ dy darting? I've been 223, beth urs. cher care! T think may- hel come. 4. twink he will, Allyi"| almost gues s00 1oMk 0 find me. 1 Then Atice would pour out her heart) .«[ve te ere since 8. T've te the ‘child—adriohing’ up the #ym-| vie boards thine I stopped walking Sandy woubl grow Ike Alice, Un.| lf an hour ago.” You must have til finally it would seem fantastic] “fe seems FS 8 BERET BR western business man, the western manufacturer 151198 165 136. 14898 ‘that she had ever been a young,| whole live: pair ee . Pve lived e&timate the enormous good they will do in the in-{ pve run, are smother iasteed of thinkin how Marble Tournament 191 194 181 170 191 106 149 * 3 hale, lives, slnce Tee bea here. lovely thing, sought afte ted, Whe! ‘me, Gandy? awift vision. of hersaf}uharee | RFOW tired “long belore evitable expansion of the future. . [each could support the other, and, by a strnog| Atlantic City, N. J. July 2-—#)—| Ki 62 60 51 85 ' A community of based knowledge Willig Harper, 11-year-old Kentuck- ‘ ti jown to lunch to- - "8 Crime and Communities paccan foods seaipekiean or anowiedige of OUF lian, who learned his mable playi sed ot thom cld-both.‘of| git l2gked dawn, trying to sce her 4 “Some observers might see no connection between “9 ws with rounded lumps of coal ou 59 defrauded lives. And} Sandy? welfare. Undoubtedly we have done little to sup-| of the mine where his father works, _James G. Blaine marching clubs of the last cen- ly Sandy flung her head up.! learn that. Y. Your little ng tremis tod: the hampion shi; Her life to go on like that? No love, ” irricrtannt Scricas seaves;!! but there. ts, press our half baked extremists. The east has peraggy Evie my ean -- “a yeni rs 495| 50 Res yg Gadnsre everson, marvel are bag He tocked them The old political hing clubs bol. a-plenty also, but they are kept where they belong,| Gore of Springfield, Mass., in 100 . Ther again. in Ais arms swept =The old political marching clubs were a sis "| whereas in the west the sound and solid thinking | final round of the fourth annual na- | Tillotson 1g No one could ask it, (Continued. They stood for a type of community life that has| majority has let the crank and the agitator hold | tional marble tourn: Co. Judge ee from the earth. Nowadays the voter, a hi : the limelight and offer th representatives y individualized person, goes to the polls and| sf wente® eunin natives /New Earth Shocks —_| Suita _- 239 108 18 50 6s 1 188 98 casts his vote without any of the red flares and| ‘The east can afford to be complacent and con-| in Central Sumatra | sex o a. psa in 165 1 144 151 114 $4 $3 e& seees Bs Soe8akS Fee &F sac.s Be. excitement of that ancient day. He has become &| descending while western intelligence is inarticu- “gelf,” rather than a unit in a community. late and western power neutralized by an inter-| yf2dang, Sumatra, July 2-—(— ” | Ne shock: red’ in| Juatioes So-called “crime waves” are no more than a pub-| necine warfare between sanity and blatant radical-} picky Rory pen at least 200 Beer ‘The letters from classes shai eae orien ta , oti pape rs neatly s 8 18 state of mind following a remarkable series of | ism, | Unquestionabl te inion {i inced | Persons are reported to have been| Boise 168 123 156 173 257 161 184 125 tten on Gusiness stationery, high-handed endeavors. We have lost a valuable| at this moment that the demand for agrical filed in Tuesday's quake, | Gusseliiai isk tal i6p 488 teecaiD scrawled almost 1 en Pei: at this moment that the demand for agricultural] The damage to property will be 46 146 145 209 162 169 140 116 Beni deterrent to crime these days and that is: ‘“What| relief is denied only because it is irrational, ig-| enormo: ispatches ind 37 39 54 40 57 63 38 field for my work,” the req reads, of hen Tepres will people think?” norant, unsound, and incompatible with the na- | ™!"& into millions of-guil 87 108 138 121 93 15285 -Just « little ambiguo: th 2 sAssocia- ‘The criminal is not the exception. We are all| tional welfare, including, of course, that of the 154 155 180 198 168 154 114 a Ford to growing. to distrust the weight of our neighbor’s| west itself. But if the west were organized as perk ine Ford ion, yWhere there used to be general personal | the east is, and as well able to work out its poli- Veterans’ Bonus Bill r ain in a community now there are| cies and back them with its united weight, there ee aaiid : : - 99 The Peabody, Houghteling & Co,, |e a Seek teak at ae ee eee ae ae it St lteter | te mut or ‘ 5 is, of western man of western ralizing e world war vet- ~ ion ry It is easier to stray from the beaten path when| posals.. Strength is resnectaas and the a G crane! Beans Pe fe bons ie are 155. 1; mn ee ° across ae ‘Mlesoust, i a special meeting called for the there isn’t a large company to tread the path with| strong only potentially. In action it is distraught | 771,174 over a four-year i i - r Sales 3 t jer to ‘the fetermneten: The following officers were chosen yu. The pressure of community opinion has been/ and weak. It has not learned to know its own|, The measure was sent to for|.to head the mission; * » Representative y 0 : % greatly, especially in the larger cities. Even| mind or present its own case. Blatherskites have 8 gti! - m2 sreasting the Yes 184.170 181 172 184 107.161 103. .88 F im, the smaller towns this condition also is beins| talked for us too much and too long. Yet western | n ting ot : — ands “Ne 93 (92 111 141 188 152 102: 168 103 11 ire, received and answered. fone b¥ought about. thought on public questions is as sound and far- lan a Opiltartone alonen the 140 180 207 209 161 126 168 192 118 e requests are very genera! , sighted as that of the east, It ts high Sime i | Corteetitied be eotenne teens 81 68 85 101 100 96 ) se. cite. oskienae ai er rales Heroes of History learned to express itself and devised appropriate | death and provides for pay: and regulations, and dats about side E r ts of deceased veteran: 66 202 122 . : ive praise of our heroes is stupid, we have| agencies for composing at home its healthy differ- | be adjusted tion, 1 : mander, pian! rt the word of Prof. Evarts B. Greene, of the de-|ences for suppressing its ill-advised impulses, Ted tee ree ramones 98 pots Hagstrom and’ Verner” Nerdquist, t of history of Columbia University. The| for evolvirig sound measures for the common fur-) jechnicelities on which ike comptrml.| cig ty about two.minutes he came|the Sandman’s front door and Flope sce officers’ of the Gospel Missi declares that too much laudation of our | therance of its interests in the national policy: Gspendents, | back: with a hundred little moon | Wass ing on ‘the Sandman’s front) have teaea ron diet invitati heroes suggests a stupidly pessimistic view) The Tribune has suggested as one step in this boemsrropenmeay, <> id fairies, carrying the big, telescope. Flops! Hells, Inco!” called worsh: ‘our own times when we have to deal with ordi-| direction, and earnestly urges the creation of a . nse dtg “inere we are. We ‘came to ey beings. midwestern or western chamber of commerce in and a telegraph’ L wade Flops and Inco never moved. “The professor is right in that dishonest history | which all our major economic interests shall have . thin, can't hear m6 een ke ible representation—western agriculture, western trans- 2.—\—It's going to we - OW, Portation, western commerce and manufacture> (an Fare Ae yageys M8. fixed the telescope exactly in Let us not procrastinate: Let us have. done the Pangalos fegime. A dears te Pied orgs = be clreed rence: “1 jay imposes of hands with diffe s that defeat us repeatedly. Let drachmas "avon $24) on’ bachelors red. a the with on those over 40, thie he wet All over, meee vith see ¢ moon too. First jee much of its force and is, shortsighted, There use in denying defeat after we've been beaten; WB sense in pots calling kettles lilies. But be kind to our heroes, professor. We have : 46 47 65 67 107 120 106 69 77 74 788{high spuruling adventure; riding] hers “Sangy_—Benderiy ie ores publishing advertising and merchandising and buy-| There were some westerners, like Senator Borah, 332] Shafer ..........260. 215 241 277 282 207 188 258 159 160 2247 necice? jy on the crest of the wave— Ramon She ave faint, ing would grow less and less and the wheels of| opposed to it, for even the sectional division had ‘Third Disteict Com. of She looked up from the waters,| potrified laugh. She flung out her pfogress would cease to move. its few exceptions, but what we hope the people| _ Backman Fricke pall 180 190 236 217 159 156 214 136 tee 1786) serains g her. even, fac, aut to. the hands, trembling withthe’ n 2Forty-five million copies of each _issue|of the midwest will learn from the fate of the | Crofte .- a oe Cem. et er Ua i= I have itt because of his happy voice, his warm, of 13,400 newspapers enter every home, | McNary measure and the general treatment of the} painted W 18 | Hoople . 84 96 88 1072] trating bite of iy "Oh, ni Seah tau thing! Wh office and shop of the * land, —influenc-J agretultural situation, is that there is a sectional | Eeklund . 64) Kitchen... 1551992! shivered. She felt tears creeping to] dig you come?’ You darting! “ve ing millions of people every day in their cohesion in the enst which is deserving of imita-| Sitherviile 131 Ni: 281 168 148 8265. 90 <68. Gh, 110pL here. Be was gone—loamiane.. | "Ake cocida’s agp his thee -onipene ja __ititimate contacts with their neighboring streets,| tion in the west.. The east, as The Tribyne has | Grass Lake 19 98 141 140 190 198 155 157 121 117 Botter—glad he was gone—butiriit of his head. It looked strong ie towns, states and nations, The world and its activ-|Pointed out repeatedly, profits constantly: by its | Wilson .. ‘ 153° 144 165 158 91 4 99 92 175 tere aa Res Beats and beautiful in the darkness, His ther 4 ity is brought to the doorstep of the poorest man, intelligent sense of its own material interests and | Regan 9 53 70 72 74 64 116 100 50 87 ere—far down there? The| She wait a wi ma ne mili { { ake |