The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1926, Page 4

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eeersmcnsce coir eetao as PAGE FC FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE is approaching. ‘Then he arises and jerks his thumb | The Bi Bismarck Tri bune at the driver, meaning, “Please, could I ride?” Seems to Be Permanent | An Indepeadest Newspaper The motorist gives the thumb-jerker a ride—and of TODAY Her Own Way #3 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER sometimes a watch and chain and many other valu- (Established 1873) ables—risking his life to do so. ‘Tis sad, but’ true. Those deserving rides must : A Published by the Bismarck Tribune Com; bd Z ; Nismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice a¢| suffer for the robberies of the professional ride ow rolOVE TS A JEALOUS four tae PR ig Me gore Fig) ignited ae Sismarck, as second class mail matter. bummer-—the thumb-jerker. Z DONT Si Tt be cold a ung papretestea Sinesr George D. Mann..........President and Publisher f intend © BE ABLE Te g eo fea She found, that the the nal se ings hens of iste at fitter. : . now | eal gem! | Sabseription Rates Payable in Advance os The Nickel Ride FIGURE DESPITE we if ' talked nly” ieee ae Barry Cornwall.” Daily by carricr, per year... * Other cities are keeping an interested eye cocked COOLIRGE'S ECONOMY iN mi a cbice pd Perso My pasts tat Daily by m fi per year, (in on New York’s big subway strike. And for a very ANT - Far i Ly mai r ye : (in state outside Bismarck) .. CC igi ae . : Zee [never anything but Daily by mail, outside of North Dak * @00| Aside from the fact that it is a very entertaining} | ed for bre y' aa bid Member Audit Boreau of Circulation spectatcle—to those, at least, who don’t directly suf- Biers . fer by it—New York is one of the, comparatively] ay ; oe Rare not whe vocina tats We estate, wae ake Member of The Associated Press fe iti here street car rid by ht | \ use republication of all news dispatches ‘i : ; | ‘ Res “ on ; g: it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and nies | For years. and years 5-cent fare has been a big | : ‘ , 4 eget ing when ie toate oe) * efforts the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | municipal issue in the metropolis, and it goes with- * " tr notorious — : a rig! Kd of republication of other matter | out saying that it can’t be maintained in the face of q bere are also reserved. many wage boosts. ae Foreign Representatives Other cities are saying, “Five-cent fare is fine, but ‘ G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY we are wondering how you expect to keep it if you 5 CHICAGO DETROIT | are forced to raise wages.” One Bi Banc BUC sath : Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. Best AC Bvaltner comet and were rounding up the inmates q FAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH scape 2 and gambling peraphernalin they ughts raced NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. came upon the body of # man ii ung Women, one oy Vg nig rich, Editorial Co t alcove. It dently because| and one of them (Official City, State and County Newspaper) jai Commen t Russia’s Resources Property Rights in the Ether ¢ 7 rrel is the great realm of undeveloped possi (Chicago Tribune) ~ rds some time before. eee (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) Potentially she could be the richest, most} ‘The senate and the house find themselves opposed , . the others. had not. made thelr Z ROW: Joan G mets productive nation in the world. Properly organized | on the question of radio control, ‘The house passed / 24 9 icine lienmanabney bnnenean . and properly exploited she could become the great-| the White bill, which would place control over radio ee a ; 3 : hear fl est ‘econemic factor in the world as we know it.!in the hands of the secretary of commerce. The y ij Jou say that!” igewacised saa Speaie, mani cats, Te We ned It is no wonder, then, that the eyes of the indus-| senate more recently approved of the Dill bill, which c i ‘) Sandy, real before them, blanched brown, almost Yair i f}) . and shaking. “I don’t want to be} back in the approved 1 paid for it. No one could pay ‘snappy ours gentlemen. He was for it. I'm not going to be feet 9 inches and proud of his tie moocher! You, bringing your kids Seeutders a a iaperise waist. This in edi J the dozens for breakfast, was Dougl ut trialists the world over are turning to the vast ex-| propuses the creation of a separate radio commis- pange of this great country and that the fingers of | sion, these same industrialists are poking here and there, % 5 ‘The truth of th tt J tiple s y searehing for those sources of raw material that will Me of the: matter ix t iat then gil is very rae tisfactory tt brendcastaey,, bi hite bill -Mtanch and dinner—makinge & regulat| "But to Judith those 5 feet 9 inches insure them control of a vast new market. ie ‘si agiors a thst ~ ‘fo Rat It i He 7 r Alf ‘'Velave of Alice — calling me &/ measured all of romance and beauty And Russia they will find what they seek. It abe pedir M4 4 saupdane tevin +] moocher!” the world contained. She could __ And in Russia they will find what they seck. certing to the people who have spent large sums of Essie put a set of old tortoise| ‘hardly bear it en he looked isa region of tremendous natural Tesources, only money constructing broadcasting stations, and other \ ake Jeney. Le are tee weal at vg eeaer ae toa] eyes, Hate cyl See vi aaa ie oe of raat large sums and much energy and initiative in build- \ : a fee if she Seal ie, mere quality. iS, whe Though tes quality, for instance, has only lately been discovered | ing up a good will, to be told—as they are told in Z quar jing already arreling over| ‘him ail that was knightly; imi i es, while oi er mi < . 4 ‘ took f her and if they, the very soul of uns in some 100 places, while oil and other mineral} 15+, bills—that their enterprise crégtes no property B -— ———_— £ Fget bale tor : of her L y Gwolling. Govind Tubes. ren cwial resources ure daily becoming more evjdent as. a — - ba Ste Soe BS Sr ae “ right; that their license and wave length may be taken from them if the controlling power sees fit. Railroads are perhaps the most regulated of any They were all. eryin now. ling cyes. eee great sub strata under the verdant steppes: Aud in the matter of agricultural products Rus- tthe big, roomy old place—no_ rea: "3 rcsbalic P son for serving three meals a day, But « few ans later Sandy went] Four years Judith had loved him. for washing towels and mending through the living room where her fi A oe “He loves me, He doesn’t know n wheat has long’been recognized as a major 2%" | means of interstate commerce, yet they are not so socks. (Sen he Rg ogee Twas a ant this. Wilt ‘he find lt out? Ob, will tribytion to the foodstuffs of the world. Vastliivited, ‘The road which had foresight enough to ” cunman Alice became melancholy. She went" yoy get @ coat with fur on it, Sandy he ever find i strefehes of the golden grain reach as far as the | iG ouch the only mountain pass available is MEHERIN ||| sbout with red lids and in a pair of "Oh, Td rather have good line and] And in tiedle “ae read of such eye ican see, There is ho good reasbn why corn pas old ‘house slippers mueh too large. material than a lot of shoddy, dagen Picturing herself the hero- | permitted to profit by its initiative. It acquires a | ere es meting — Cie eed rae Goins oe eee when te . she fel e woul e “] y awaken, as Davi 0: property right. stay on here taking her’ mother's|, “Humph—ien't $80 a big price for] dig) winning ‘at last his The air is a new medium of communication. These THE STORY SO FAR [her mother's belief in her own infal-| placo; living out the remainder of,® tet reer could not be grown on an immense scale, together with all other varieties of grains. . . A hispered: nder eds ganiz bX ly this ; s MeNeil, inh ith life, Knew that Madeline had talk-| 4 ott tow iby peeds ie bauer bt e ie fs are very new laws that are being constructed tu aun Ben cd alto, peers raat Ubility. And how grimly she had en- mother husband ene oe ae; ed with her father. oe deen gee Ager rin - miné of Eel pelthad the a it of see ind. very | "egulate communication through the ether. Legis- {lio please he impoverished family. | forced it. ane a shallow, retir-| Alice, 5 hee as Tong Though) "Oh. 1 don't knw” the anewered] ig tela Gudith, ‘recounting pir ant betes : ot le ery personalit § > na He eae aati Seek ciciltie + i, | lators are groping to fit old legislation to a very | 4; daliow A. son dies ‘rate tite ‘with the force ef hueernat mow lees Rie Saag gee Retitanes bere ay, pCR aides far ihe Tae ) a i temaistic. bag Las enikéein aioe j.{ modern demand. It is right that they should pro- eil, her uncle, aids in plans! ridin, de-F One afternoon—a ‘blustery, April]” A thought that _— ‘had cherished she, wat 9 durn ‘cute. i ee i, : ndy and her mother to take since her quarrel with Madeline, she; ceed cautiously, guarding the rights of all the peo-| trip to Honvlulu, There she meets one—but asking "She, 3 ard. her oldest sister! 80™ spoke. “Isabel ‘had her life ple, But they have gone very far in that direction. | Ramon Worth, who saves her life in that, even dead, thelr lives conform , Madeljne, Y talking= talking . about! sured, iseah "t pls s " the surf. On the same steamer home} to her wish. ‘Close to ‘her were these bly #ith the balance of the world and the thought of the More sane nations. - sis Seal s ‘ sto} id jitsened. That desirable result, however, seems as far away | They deny the pioneer in nearly every other line of /',¢° declares. his love Murillo. says| ghildren woven of her flesh. — Ty\ “Her three teers were in ine big| » los actiled.” , 7 he great Russian experiment is not yet endeavor. We do not look to see the owners of pres-|‘he will never release her. Judith] hemscelves they might seem unique | front teom—the- mother's room.| ; “Could you setae it to'me? I he Sel roe Fe bs gay. contemptuous as orer. The great Russian exp t broadcasting stations deprived of their licenses; | Moore, a cousin, tells Sandy love ts[ndividiials—utterly ‘new and inde- | were sorting out Tsabel’s| Want to go back to. work. {ound with his Nps end eerenely re. ' 3 i i inden é complete and the world must await the expansion of | Cnt Droadeasting stations deprived of their licenses; | cserything. Murillo overtakes heras| Pendent ‘beings, chafing at * the/ clothes and her few trinkets, ‘To her astonishment: “Yes—but! sows Meet Miele ten or th yet practically untouched bonanza until the we do not foresee any such injustice; but we ques-/ she gocs for a tryst .with Ramem.} meshes;her love sought .s0.continu-}: They sat at a-table before the old! You don't need sang gente trem. a. en cover the vast{ tion the principle which appears in both bills of | He appears unexpectedly, at a party/ ally to twine about them, marble mantel. In the quaint fire) , Ske could scarcely breathe. Child-] "Noone quossed the joy of these re- dawn of a new governmental day comes over abhi IAW AG eae cecoperts aciatibiadliorin she is giving or her friends. After| | But to her they could never be x0 lace framed with iron. molding the} ish tears mente flying to her ovens No peated disillusions to Judith. ¥ .. China to the Black Sea and north to the dali lites y property right in the air. the party he strikes ther. She leaves} scp ie was the mother in logs crackled. place for ‘ther _—s ante would be]. He hung up the dishtowel, gave « —eo ‘The Dill bill, as we have goes further than| his ‘house and accepts the kindly! whose thought they had existed be cline said: “Well, what does) &tad to ‘have aioey Bulk: We cieee het Baltic and Siberia. the White bill i thi i: It ee ies the right | *ttentions of Ramon, whose home| fore ‘they .knew the breath» of th think she’s going to do, I She said iaugl net wngt, 1 want worn k' broom, kicked: a° cheis ‘ 1 White bill in this respect nies the right) she shares. She then accepts a posi-| own distinctive lives; and.in whose rely she can't expect.to may, ihe in ay cee 6 ar i is) fato “place. q of any owner of a licensed broadcasting station to! tion in the city, spending occasions} ! y would alwaye hore de mooching on poor papa.) Mic five bo ‘Beh the e" beat eee *e aa ‘ The Auto at College al weekends with Ramon at his home. insie, organic part of her be-| With all the bills. he. huss to pay e 3 $}ooma. Keith | said somethin ou ‘The automobile at college has just received a ter-| Sell his station for more than the original cost of | She is sunrmoned home because of her| ing-~ She felt intimately, Tike the | mow. Chapter 74 . |gudith didn’ heart A diespmointed ¢ St ena he hands of the University of {the physical apparatus. The fact of possessing a) mother's illn he meets Murillo} beating of her own pulse, this bond.| Alice, curling her lip: “I'm sure| For the hundredth time’ Judith ook came over her face. riblo indictment at the ‘hands of the y ‘| fi and refuses to live with him. Afew] | It'was severed now. She lay quiet! she’ les ry The d-| license, the fact that a good will may have been ‘Sh e's. welcome as far as I’m con-jdraped the gauzy curtain: el “Then the boy ci — ther shoul. . : y ring of the truth. Accor * days later me mon rer to ibe ier smile on—| cerned..Muriflo seems’ to be about| room was ready for its enchanting, fers, shook ‘her whimsicaily. His ‘ thorities at this institution student} built up by that station, cannot legally be consid- | say goodiye, A few days later Sandy's) Stim ee moved from alli. their! the only aan she coulda’ work. You) guest. aStnty would arrive in thel deen. warm voice | rage teasingly: ther petty. strife. t a CO ON: et on THE, story FROM] "S wouldn't -find dad forking over $100) m Ba be gteen-eyd, Em! I'm only tomobiles has shown a direct rela-| ered a transferable asset under the terms of the bill. dy snuffed a waning candfe,| and telling. me to pet melt some| ‘Half ‘of the dreesenidrawers were goike next door. Want to tell Jude.” . . Pt ri , 4 e1” Ju. ‘Then,, too, there have been numerous accidents in-| that an applicant already holding a wave length un-} Angus McNeil “came into Sandy's}, She walked with her uncle, Bob)" “Eighty forthe coat and $20 for Pgs Upp lie pire heap: icsepreeg ae gr reigns th volvinie a considerable damage and serious bodily | der the present law must, when petitioning for a li-| room aud Jaid an armful of clothes on) Me i tic standing below normal inasmuch] The Dill bill, further requires—very much in the pring gz her eyes. “I couldn't do’ it,| clothes, would you?” dleared for her and half of the hooks’ Emma's mouth tened. Judith iecti ‘i chapte! 3 m iffehe sat Cd eer i constant and serious waste of time.| manner of the objectionable Mexican land laws—| ayour husband 7 3, the e bat up now and borsed it wi eee say the paid|in the closet. ‘ew this. His Per jealous than any ten girls that Dougla: a A ress. The poor kid hasn't got a| the windows, done after a sketch! Sudith ol sasidered this. wi with the hed. 1t was very late—the night ‘And ‘in_ the newspaper was an_ac-| rug injury; there are constant violations of local and] cense, sign a waiver of all claims to his previously funeral. “Look at them| count of the tuncral with this line:| "Eighty dotiars for that coat and Pirylcmgntpr ce er aid Pecmitates| Mik, emulation, indeed state laws governing motor traffic and a wholly un-| assigned wave length. The Dill bill grants only ? pe "ecg Mpa in atten-| not scrap of fur on it! She must] Brilliant ae shades and over ina a harry aed powder over -year licenses, whereas the White bill authori fo—u| with cae | Sees these luring veils of silver volle that her nox necessary and dangerous congestion of traffic in} two-year licenses, is " ermine collar ‘and uffs—a| with an attack of flu.” Sandy sped in like a flash: toned in with th the soft gray walls, the Instead “ot ‘that bi streets adjacent to the campus; and finally, the usc | licenses for five year periods. The Dill bill au- me piece suit new just before she; on men (po: Maddy? whale offering a ation open hich | thorizes government stations to compete with pri-| Tt, away. And the small black that was the last but one of Sandy’s| to ae If my for thy: fine oid: rosewood of cars has contributed to moral delinquencies whic! horizes Ko mt 3 s: LO COM MRERE SEEN with a ue of white wigrettes on| cnoounters with ther husband—the ihave & coat pe it to you? Atver es have resulted in dismissals from the university. vately owned stations, and it lacks any provision for lasb but for the one ghastly finieh.| six months working on a ¢ ERS A t te ‘thi te Her father said n Ye This is a ous matter. Not all colleges agree | appeal from the commission's rulings. e an Spe Piranesi was ‘allowed subtly a feel thot they roi $100 pia pt bie ie with the University of Mlinois. Many of them be- Still further, as between the two bills, the major] Sandy colored, ‘her ‘astonishment| all thought her callous and her grief! forget IT gave up my job where 11; : A °f habas Py laced ediatel, hil, | feigned. She ‘hi layed lieve there is no harm in the undergraduate auto | argument in favor of the White bill is that it cre- uieetai btereess. 4 econ. “uc had cefased chat te ene arma my in Seen am come down whe mobile. That conclusion, however, a little hard] ates no new commission, but recognizes the control | clothes because she would be pointed ar, her mother’s dying wish. | And thee forget, that’ I've worked to believe. Young people are young people. When] of radio as an administrative function of the gov- eae wife, She must vote ee his oer ge Merri night and ie are ond, seved the a flashing car stands out at-the curb and the studies | ernment, to be administered by one of the regularly She shook out oe coat and laid oe But shalt ae rade. “ et a. im or wilco ibis: i ve i js , it down again earefu whole ‘house an empty, 1 withstan e carefree lure of the outdoo of a is large eyes moving uneasily.| ved no reason for eeping| for taking care 3f ‘mother? "On, beaut al ee now with the walls so deli-| . He come, in th spin. appeal ie a coisa experts to be. named by th: | “Well? Well— what shall I tell him? wal : i ein the back way, kicking’ gate and fresh. ‘These walls were) open the screen door of the kitchen So, even if the automobile is not as serious an ene-| president, and to the court of appeals of the Dis- ‘re quite all right. Hej = e of the it seriot P ave taken good care of’ fer matt eee re eau Some on for a wal my of the college student as the University of Ili-« trict of Columbia. es idea ia kk deel Nest ride!” nois contends, nevertheless they can easily be con-{ Radio broadcasters, who will be the principal per-| took “a determined step toward the, ceived to be a rival of study. Not that it is a condi-| sons to be affected by ang controlling legislation, | door and paused xe “You i the aisle with ‘him. / tion that can be laid entirely to the automobile, if! are justly apprehensive oyer the clauses denying | O¢ “ourse you + lige this. | (NEIGHBOR, Cast weer | scholastic standards are not lived up to, for, in the) property rights contained in‘both bills. But as be- : s ‘ x Bead BoRROwED MY GRASS old days, the “gay 90's”, there were many other} tween the two, they ‘wil! _n0. sitticngse pre- Po in iusiage ner ge ms least | SARS. YOu HAVEN!T things that distracted the mind of the student. There] ferring the White bill! = , head, ‘her breath bursting, turned, to! aoa ne cro roto ey stood this round : d . ‘ int warmth vibe darkness and have always been and always will be diversions ak oe EP ok dear wish ote vlgarne tes] a ae fae ooking which will serve to divert the mind of the college | Excluding Good Citizens ing to walk down aisle with him.| 7. “Sy aan ae Sovcias Sone ote fe to pole by ae at student from the subjects comprising the curricula.| , (St. Paul Daily News) rine, yh ee te ae cai ‘ table, set ry hoy peg PE epg ns wal ‘oath . The automobile may be a big offender, but it may} ‘The Norse centenary celebration in St. Paul 8| intend to make # scene at a time like oe ida not fleserve the drastic prohibition of the Univer-} year ago and the recent visit of the crown prince of | this? You know it was your moth- ; i it. to ‘h turn | ) .. sity, spf aay ee Bae course ee be desir-| Sweden to this country brought forth nation-wide io "yout husband *, Be “per dying! it evolyed in a practical manner. ii % if ‘ho} you woul see the light. able if it coul iy Pi praise of the Scandinavian peoples. It was not |}ope that you would see oe ae pene pean y jmerely polite praise. It was sincere. No class of | for her children. If she could speak The Thumb-jerker immigrants is more desirable than the Scandinav-| pow she would ask you ite do this. se are the days the motorist’ gets out the old jians. None is more easily assimilated. Fou. ae) give this last tribute to her Fand heads for the open road and finds it ser | “And yet, the United States will begin on July.1,| | Sandy pressed her fismers against; for.repairs. 1927, to make it increasingly difficult for Scandi-| Mer Cheeks steadied hergelt against, deny-are the trials and dangers cof tonne. i navian immigrants to enter the country in large “Nort wil ‘not wal i im” # hide where a garage isn’t and bite great holes | numbers. ler father’s green egés, now 4 5 clei rpeagres " its Tals news fu ‘res PEERS in yun expensive tires. Someone is always putting! Under the present law, the annual quota of immi- turigualy in is eR i ols asd Nin pedid love 2 fa ¢, of aman ing aie tte ‘drew- a creek across the road, digging deep ditches on one | grants from each country is 2 per cent of the num- Sandy. Then he walked stiffly from! WAM Y : ; a aad eae ‘his, articles. ‘d him thudding d ‘th ‘ 2 . x > soye Sen 'talngsorad ce geek rae irate side or throwing up huge embankments on the other.! bey. of persons, born in that country, who were resi- ingly harmless stones bury themselves onl¥/ dents of the United States according to the 1890 { to leap at the swiftly speeding machine and forth-| census, But beginning in July of next year, immi- | with kijock a gap in the crank case, causing its vis-! grants are limited to 150,000 a year, and the num-|. a ous content ta bespatter tMesysrounding scenery. |ber from each country is based on the population | "Bownsiairs’ in the old salon par-| Chickens pause to medi or jump at the radi-/ according to the cefisus of 1920, lors, candles burned above the cof-| as your four-wheel brakes scream. Despond-| ‘Next year Sweden's quota will be reduced, under | f't;,%@ading ® gentle i ee : { boas, geese, ducks and hound dogs place their! the new regulations from 9,561 to 3,072; that of | The soft wavy ‘heir was fluffed pret-' } under your whirling wheels, this being the| Norway from 6,453 to 2,053; and that of Denmark beg = gor et the satin custion. t vague, fleetii i een ‘gal, way they have of becoming valuable stock ‘| from 2,780 to 945. ‘The quota from Russia will be| caught on her mouth as though me By owner. nearly doubled. happily here. liking the grace- ‘the frantic honking# of your horn, con-| Scandinavians throughout the country are bitterly | an a bi ond 1 ae ae Seats |. retain their inherently philosophical protesting, and ‘it would seem that their protest is weld ‘she ask this—that Sandy to look out. justified ‘The now citizen front northern Europe it & Send ou cred the hee at her feelgg pepe Dargo easily fits into our national life. His standards and | mother's, Sincal Psa Re awit he te | en shee ro Sp ealiee:eecme She Bedi iges AMET: | Soraya wee ice’ss heard his shocs drop srep. OVER To SMITH’S House | . AND CALL HIS ATTENTION TO SUCH CanBeasnes as HL v9. your” He. Bi ae. Sie serie + ‘ho Sinnott sock

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