The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 31, 1926, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE { parents are impressed with the idea that they are The Bismarck Tribume revives toraty untit to associate with theis kind An Independent Newspaper ‘Society, church and state hasten to assure them THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | that this_is so. (Established 1873) | But is this fair? Is not society at large respon- , and the parent the unwitting agent through sibl reer gS een ae ee oceemine ae, which society has branded its young with the mark JOAN Fi me squate and you> whe have always Nemarck, as second class mail matter. lof its own depravity? Parents, by and large, are oak £ te. Mas SPE ON bape reagan aE George D. Mann..........Preaident and Publisher | hout as decent as those who have not assumed thin As i : lgot it? 1 now, “Barry: Weft it} be meh these girid, for lam tere , responsibility, and it seems too bad to saddle them | : j 8round here somewhere, an now | ill, very Datly Sy cartier per Feat ese nese .#120) with the tendency to unrestraint that is evident in| ; Tnough not fo'have keptcity {had Cornwall's uate Jem Smith naties ° Daily. by ea per year, (in Bismarck)........ 7.20| the youth of the day. ; Barry’s body carefully gone over by|ed it and rushed out and left us ly by mail, per year, : in state outside Bismarck) { Parents of the present age are perhaps not models the officer when I was around, for| alone. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. + Go| by which the perfect man or woman might be pat- I wanted to make sure tl there ‘Please get me a doctor,” said ‘was nothing on it that would help. us ss | te t what was coming to us. Joan turned to me’ and bs Member Audit Bureau of Circulation terned, but at least they have no more of the ear- 1 - . ° And “now ‘these sitte have get and telephone to the Good "Seman. | marks of Satan than were sported by the parents i around you some way.’ You turn that tan , Hospital, Tell them to hs ae A Member of The Associated Presa ‘of bygone days. As a matter of fact, in the “good > young wom bd st rooms ready and send an i ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 914 inv." rey ‘1 how that the! : - "Were-| ambulance with & nerve. an doctor wee for republication of all news dispatches credited eA TEE ose Soe eee art eae < Yj over here as soon as possib! 1 to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and ‘also | People, us a whole, were not as cultured, as refined ; RS y thing. ied oe bee cate guriswres wen He : an ceeeney case a y, the local news of spontaneous origin ie lished here- | or as capable as those of today. Certainly by all , h i j leisy : t ‘es ae eenay ten i i ame pow ei ice jeredith, will foot all aa All rights of republication of all other matter | standards of education and custom the parents of / Tam paid‘ for keeping that in-| | “Do you think; Joan, that I had ‘ ee ee ee |today is the better equipped to intelligently per- WGA PE ge acer sete ee Ake a Foreign Representatives | form the delicate task of raising children who will i 1 My , g ‘Again that hated “eelee’ #00 en S uly jaiey : | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY be good citizens, ) | act surprisingly on Mrs. ‘corawattist| to the telephone I knew that it was k CHICAGO DETROIT es oe \ 2 = : eee i put ad ey sneey eared, safe to leave vod Mere- ‘ Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg. fi Sacred . | to raise her head. I-sprang forward] anyone, for she had found herself” PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Be tla i diated? , | ond pub.e pillow under t, Inna’ t iS NEWYORK - . .- Fifth Ave. Bldg.| Vix Jim Jeffries, the same hearty Jeff of old, and , ; g ba gee rer FORA oa A Ths a eS ‘pompous Tom Sharkey, sailor-man, on whose broad A\\ : R said in a low distant voice, “Oh,| door. ‘ 3 (OMcial City, State and County Newspaper) | chest a majestic tattooed ship still rolls, have fought Ny AW Foe Sg Rete FRE A oR od : f their fight again. \ yj \) Meredith and was there at the} and the 7. and she is hay 4 = Farm Conditions Improve This time it was in a theater, in New York the ; f ng toad house, fey twas: tl OL te possible ean be under the 5 « The department of agriculture’s annual survey | other duy, where they reenacted with patient mim- } : de your wernt, J'm going to stick te pepeae er : found=further improvement in the financial condi-| jery the struggle they staged at Coney Island ir | \ “ G y my own sex, jatly when: it is| TOMORROW: Marriage os s Last tion of farmers in 1925 over the preceding three! 1899, in a day when youth was sweet to both of | ‘ ‘ between a lady who always’ treated | Resort. ’ ye ‘i | them. \\ y 7 While the improvement is only slight und applies! Sharkey, the same unctuous, forntal fellow, the . : : : j ee wate ae ets ee mostly to farmers of certain classifications, it indi- : 5 flaring, blaring boy of the seas, the halest party you “I wish it were years from now.” cates sa) graglual return to a healthier condition. | ever saw. you, Sandy—that’, ‘Then he leaned down and. whisper- % ‘4 a RS wot of you. However, much greater improvement must be made| Jeffries, dignified, slim-wuisted, fit as a fiddle, LE \ Yyy 4 Secs us, Sandyt™ He Pa ited nee ite ee Rita mean . possible in’ the very near future.if the farm is to| looking not a day older than he did under Reno's N ‘ - Yj f h feoher so lobe aqeines mete onan. beck ™ young, ‘20 jubilatre ! be kefit from serious loss through the inevitable | blazing sun in 1910, when he made the tragic dis- \ Z , Z _— pee ee ee % . fesertion of manpower to more lucrative occupa-j covery that within his magnificent shell the spark | . ‘ = i . t a And sh e pictured ‘him ae her, sheer precipice; upward till ‘topmost Cliff, where tl 3 Where he set he: away from you, Dou ¢@ tired joy end whispere: jax. Ihave you @afe. Are yo 1A Not from me, Sandy. .You will ? id she answered, weep- 2 | never be far.away from me. But' “Yes—oh, happy!” Ill take you away from it... Perceived vaguely that her hap- é : Sandy, I'm going to take you away| piness cost him greatty—so she wept ‘The police ranningdown| nent TAKS, yee. where yeu can/wbrec IE . e: + + Wher 1 juie' ws it “iat vie Marel aie ie, Ket bir) iv a ‘sat @ little forward. staring y + .[ at the swing and os <4 "99 BY | quarters Agr -_ | aud ital and’ to visit 9 vast, opgiies shagawe, meete now ELENORE [tucks with hie fingers. If they traced chante to snewer: “bee they teoed f Where do the . MEHERIN im to Hal's flat--if Sandy were still] out about me? And that L went to ? tea there, then they would have both |of them--have them cold, mane | tions. Farm population is said to be noticeably de-| had died. creasing. In the past year alone the department! And as they labored through the ring, in the re- y of agriculture reports a falling off of 479,000. The! enactment of the battle that made old Coney Island a farm is too vital to the life of the nation to be per-|ring 27 years ago, as they lunged, side-stepped, mitted this constant decline. | pranced, jabbed and puffed a great deal with it all, 4 The means for proper aid for the farmer may be! a clown in an effeminate burlesque of a ring costume i difficult to determine, and to provide after being |leaped into the arena from time to time to dance determined, but unless some means are found the|around the gladiators and to be back-slapped by} farm will continue to backslide, and, in doing so, | Sharkey’s great paw. will take with it the strength and vitality of the’ We cannot reconcile the two, the mincing clown * nation, We have not outgrown the farm. Let us/and these hairy-chested ring-men of an old and gory | not get that idea. We cannot yet live on synthetic day. We must side with the crowd whose offended | ‘food, laboratory prepared, and it is necessary for|tastes demanded that the clown be removed. farms to exist in order that we may eat. Farms; It must have hurt the two old boys deeply to have ie now shesaine oF tuleds. tne BN cliche aay a word—they never] Wi bec Boy Ped the place and cannot exist unless they arc profitable. They are |to put up with a slapstick when they were re-| elciaetiayesio Wik a isanarc ck "= |port that Sandy te hidden away." «Teil me the truth, Douglas.” back a little. Bee cold: cotter not particularly profitable now, and, in fact, in some jenacting what had meant so much to them back| sg. ngy ' Welauiniers ree ace ete To ee are iae nua easton eel ar stooped and kissed “her lips) “Ob. is this it?) Is this your shack?” } lines, they are a losing proposition. The solution is;in ‘99. The bout must awaken memories in their i He was aware that Sandy's pres-| moved now. toes eh ‘ Een ay : Rare ori ear de , ves t obvious. Some method must be provided whereby | breasts that are too sacred to be made fun of. We .fence doomed them both,’ but he! What risk there might be was lit- Jude. ask of you, Doug doesn’t seem to real- as : . Tyranny by Murillo and frequent| could no lon, slyze thi ta doe farmscan be made profitable. Congress, at the last have kept a place in our heart for the fighters that | quarrels follow.. A, son dies at Birth. He glanced about "the Wcacteres Loveny weata Meet cate eetatne ae hid at nigh! Fooled ee ly Ter paren threw her head. back d. session, made no progress with remedial legislation | were, the fighters who seemed so different from the | Bob MeNeil. her uncle, aids in plans} vaguely astonished to find himself |livering her into their hands, ‘turn-l her fromitr eee ly. % Leia y i P i ; “She smiled: es, he does in that direction, but it is certainly one of the |fighters of today, and we don’t want any of this) {or Sandy and her mother to take a| sitting here, ‘apparently reading a} ing her over to infamous torture. : : r — but he knows’ {'m’ glad to : trip to Honolulu. There she meets} paper—apparently eating his dinner. Chapter 1 * topics of major importance which should be thor- !clown business. Ramon Worth, who saves her life in} No one watching. him-—yet it cost!’ He pushed the table jerki Get} : rf ‘. She: went i id made. . the suck? Me di ‘ nT § j Judith’ rode in ‘the front seat with mn and made up the bed oughly threshed out at the next congress. | Let us keep sacred at l¢ast this memory of the | Fi} el he wilmaver tein e ky. look op au ‘valtavtend: ower his cransene Gabe whpre repel reped Hal H She thought of that frat; ond, heated Do etilod she : 7 4 SaaS \grim-jawed Jeffries and the chesty Sharkey, fight- Judith ‘Moore, a Cousin, tells Sandy coffee, | eee eee | At.the counter he paused. Should| /¥ ti when she sat, Note | qa eseaile. Sigs’ Tk peeder whens ii ! jove is everything. Sai leaves low absurd tl it| he i ° » j Double Compensation ing men of old who really fought! rillo ‘and accep the kindly atten-| was. his mame on-the. blotter even If they were. investigating. hie they |Meat’ segeiae, catiting Bao his name! "Way should’ it ‘be his j Tye posults of New York's first year's trial of] ° a {tions ‘of Kamon, whose home she| if the name of Douglas. Keith were | might have located it—might. ‘mab J0é pve party | name?” j eo 8 ners alentece fe shares. When her mother dies she| traced there ten -thousand ‘times,| him as he started to drive away. 3 - ab fee oe i awarding double compensation for accidents to mi-; deaves ‘(Ramon and goes: to live with} Would he, be-s fed; ony.go utterly| He .clinched his _jawe—his eyes ? ready. I nah She. watehed him carzy Sai a norg jillegally employed seem to indicate that the Editorial Comment... {| her cousin. duditn.” Dougtas, Kei Soy ‘sictve: aa Ain’. “Why, Semon | blazing at's gray, teogeerd boy» star. few. § Rinepees., ‘ae itt inee done the F method may prove sufficiently effective in prevent- * ‘ the man whom Judith love: it mere! n name’ ing at him: from. the blurry. mirror}? She hea ini, MpEMUTING NOW—| eves Tilied with t w 2 i b y Pi tl in | duces his friend, Hal’ Hume, on. 4 drawing and idly—because of | himself-- Leave the damn. old. car, eying anxious, , tender, things. to ‘and say ‘some jubilant. thi ing $6 some extent the evasion of the existing laws | The First Carload to Judith. He, himself, fal his abysmal despondence—hgve copied | down, there!: i ‘[Sandy. Sandy's white hands touched a ay Rae Uke probection of minora: in regard ‘to labor; & by : with Sandy: who reciprocat it. The police don’t shadow a man | Friday night--go. up.to Hal's of- ‘They had put pillows and a blanket face, held him. 5 san balk iy. the iugcan of Won in Todas ah (St. Paul Dispatch) 4 4 peeoee a iaanee apes heart- name jis on a blotter! paren le aa + ee ren in taking Sandy lie! Judith went into the Kitchen sad part 5 e first carload of spring wheat arrived at Min-| jrowken. | Sandy. for this reason, rey shadowing ‘him’ would: dis le}. made a fire, ‘ “ try of the department of labor, shows that during — arrived at Min- | determines to leave Judith. She cries She thought: “Isn't it 4 , that; he. de bn— neapolis Monday from the eastern part of South | meets Ramon Worth who has return- e al ae the pone veka Sie anther " ii i 1 re A g id ques- the Wear pi —_ ee York en alone 674 Sakota. Preliminary examination of. the grain | $4 from the Orient, and she tel et aethine of ene att he |e willyenilig! - accigen' munoks under 1S Years OF REP; 0) chi showed it to be of a very high quality. This is % ‘ = Ct Us 42 fer cent violated the provisions of the law gov- ry high q J: 8 tun away together. The day before,| mét him. He could deny absolutely; He told Hal Hume. all thet Newton ~ 5 a child's. In. the vrmagle lg to the plates” Seeeene sine could. just make out her face er ‘lips. ‘Sendy's, Melee vquiet-—pa leas. a ae tr ding in the still digure Ser waist: “WaP'yoy be usually the case as to quality when rainfall has been | Sandy goes to Ramon’s office at his! that ‘he had been near Third and had ‘reported—showed him the even- : statue, beside him ther waist: | “W: eenig the employment of minors. As under the} lon than normal It ia survival of the fy and| Smiarratts, Mazes age anal Marke on Sony ig [ a ing. ano Seat at Re ae law ‘the employer, and not the insurance carrier, is} the grain is rich in protein and short of starchy | Hal Hume's apartment by Douglas, ould they have to prove . {tilting her mouth upward. gally for a| He ‘had his head otesed and liable; for the increased compensation, and as some | content ' who summons Judith to jiake care, of} sé? That handkerchief? But ri looked square: ‘boy to kiss. € mervously:. “I woe ‘ = Aaa i s rt y er. Meanwhile the police are fo 0) | i . i : of these pepe were as much as ee it sare The first carload of winter wheat, of Minnesota’ lowing the rake meatus: <, nave nr ere we | cabal - Hse Buk siesind’ $0 eck waa ee my nerve, Jude, getting you in for ; ‘ ntic illegal child employ- 5 found letters written to ry 20) the initial “K.' | sbad e ° " t oe the pragtice of illegal ¢ PI ~ eon alee nee ived Mots fone pease an Raman, Douglas Tears that news. x should that handkerchief tbe he? fare tere enh Or eer fs a ip tg eho yng “And 1 pager your hat tint wey, Deve | . ikewise of high quality, weighin, paper office is slowly but sure judith t t sh i i pa or , enough i Tid inereased disapproval with which efforts to] po joy iabvicrngee! if li vag . She gave his| the third degree Will they. this or anything.” pounds to the bushel and testing 112 protein. This| bringing Sandy's name to the fore in| laundry that one time in her name. | that ‘she's not to itt’ “Ral , He remembered a fa etek fein inka: aimee rate poli ae ees the crime. | Unless they found Sandy they would| Sandy may even have fired ing Sandy on New Year'a eve:| Jude? ‘Anything? Witt fe oaribiog, andy th sal 11 mean, —— have nothing to link h with | In th ffle sh hi fi it. ¥ jodgias . GO ON WITH THE STORY Ramon's aaatt. If they sound Sandy "n ie sane Sraation Home pee ee af eels be iy Fr ak a ee ee 4 wd pass: ‘a federal regulatory law are met makes it doubtful if such a law can be popularized at pres- done well not only in the southwest but in Minne- iv : t , " h choose any girl in the . no matter whet turns up?” |} ent. In fact, the sentiment is against federal regu-| cota, From Kilkenny, Minn, comes the report of Chapter 100. ; o ee ae all. ed quietly: “Yes—I've thought about| world, would it still be J? 1 wish| it was your name | | lation and for a stubborn stand for state rights. Ac-| winter wheat going 25 bushels to the acre and weig! ey .. ft eee rere rece vet re Newton said. Aerie cate = ‘4 oeWell it" ge Farry e oy ere to vim tae greet cigtiae, poee! |, } knowledgment of responsibility by the states and 4} ing 62 pounds to the bushel; from Jordan, Minn., Mechanically, Dongle read the he eer {ie penotied tat a man going to bnew, it! ay God, no one! miss it!” ? 7 rough 5 inceb i igatic ‘i io ven i ES | sincete effort to assume their obligations would| comes report of a similar yield to the acre. This bata eart stabbed) (elevator operator’ had © woman peat 4 make. intervention by the federal government as | | wnnecessary as it is undesirable. The penalizing of the employers is proving expensive to the employers And. another time she, told him] Bat { et him—throngs| im hiding. Sandy had her hands “folded ‘over| Wanted if sot needed it seloe “i meee was a winter wheat year and wherever sown has] , People jostled past. him—throngs| '"cispose they pressed the investi-| her face.” He took ‘her honde dows, ped, fave turned out well. net was closing—closing on him and| £8tion of his movements since Mon-| studied the. small, ‘delicate fingers, PA aig P i P mp e But spring wheat is not universally a failure. The Fonds, a ae PRE Meme ergy peed, Pe They had prints of foveld, fentarte jor cups scones, and ‘is forcing the observation of the provisions of | instance in Morton county, N. D., is worth noting. | to pe ' epee Ramlen sides mer downstairs knew him—knew. he was| She said softly Stricken, faint gH 9 is it ~ the eng se at “ parae Nev York. Other | The straw was too short for cutting with a binder, ee gia ing? eu etal He ye to tate Ja hia orm). states might employ other methods. 80 mowers were rigged up with a canvas bag be: ae siretme tthe opel. Mian yom far away with Ser ne Py < = | someon read; Butzall states should certainly put forth thee hind the sickle—something after the manner of the| Was he the may soems Settrmieg | BVERETT TRUE a . ‘ best effort to abolish a practice that is detrimental | ),Wn.mower—and the grain cut. It turns out sur- in she m, ry ¢ sont sia acts Penalt ten bushels an acre. This is trué of the adjoining| Newton's? Must be that. . . Noth. ms Judy —T love her—” urteen professors of social science assembled | counties, Grand and Sioux. These fields, because | hive une Side. pase: they could ‘ ind e Sud ie averted her “head quickly: in Chicago at the convention -of the Social Science } the straw was not more than seven or eight inches| He went down Fourth street to a sare of bes, na ee ie eee ts Saeen Alt ! prisingly well, for the heads are full and much of it | wi paige etc a yee ane he aon’ MY RIBHING TRite & cher s aes i ;runs No. 1 dark Northern, with a high protein con- | $7 Svening paper aeie..® By 1 % : i 1 » lash hing! g tag 4 Abolish Death Penalty? | tent, and yields, above return of seed, from three to fotten ‘hold ot Heiden a mises SAY, TACK ABOUT CATCHING Ft i, ; the ‘bitter, bitter end. Shel be all Refearch Council have concluded that hanging, or | tall, did not look worth cutting, but an examination fed the eee. him met | rere nese : z the soft bi “ - ‘tee tee ang kindof capital punishment, is no cure for crime. |of the heads showed that the grain was there and an g iva h le gav In Ramon’s room was an anti i ‘ gone to Ra pi e Geet m was an antique ? 14 , . = Intead“of punishment on the gallows, in the elec- | ingenuity supplied the method of retrieving it. desk with o leaf that slid, in mi ; trig chair or by the application of gas, the profes- wift trials and inty of ined this desk sie’ dea ony “ee sors would substitute swift trials and a certainty o! A New National Capital se is desk. le slid the pugishment by some method short of the death pen- ; [Illinois State Journal (Seen leaf back to place. In doing this ingfield).) some papers and a blotter got caught. ! Every time congress quits because Washington’s| They fell into a deep groove at the alty. ere is no doubt that dilatory court proceedings | summer is unbearable and every time the President side. wee * D ator Here they lay hidden until un- Se Pa : ¥ AS Schock Metariay morn Hal and the manipulations of criminal lawyers, where- | takes to the northern woods because Washington is|¢#tthed by the reporter of the even- WANT to AsOU a Hume end Douglas : by griminals are enabled to evade the consequences : hot and humid, the subject of a new national capital ing seper. cay. Ahelee: sete tree WAIT, - TES HOY y AY. j Zak 8 tiie SS ear nae a aid : ore = of their crimes, are responsible for encouragement lis agitated. If climate were the only objection in i he one already dis- napisy 7 rps it hurt yor with his none of rime and that their elimination would exert | Washington, we could dismiss the subject without | $y ‘the aoe esc ym Sleer ; i : motion of ei ._| bell tang. | Without why he icial influence, And there is none epger loss of time. For climate is the least objection to| hundreds of times as though’ whole ad, a ee i y, ‘Hal sa 3 4 eh ge os oi se as eer to Bvolve an effective method of dealing with crime | Washington as the national capital. " ogee bse PaSR enentee, with. those, a a aa Beta Rvs, e glass panel he saw without resorting to the death penalty than we, but | Washington’s location on one edge of a country Newspaper withheld thi me. —— first.” tian g men forms. “He knew! who The probability is that in eliminating the death pen- |that stretches three thousand milea to the west con-| while the p were investizating it the worthy professors would be wie i ne it for governmental headquarters. Such a|eith ine mucho” of the man wi @ minor detail alongside of speeding up the | location keeps the eyes. and the minds of the gov-|, a ie pa Why should’ it be ‘and insuring that crime would receive prompt |ernment itself glued upon a province, a very narrow! Rimcn He Ot Dancin. Reign? Did F inexorable punishment. ie eas strip of ng ng diarg the ate ionet on yes te. the palce ua 4 change is indeed ever effected rel government is in its capital. Its isolation i of this on tad phecagd done away with, let us urgently |has made it provincial and has easily encouraged its| sect ’sier with rare, Un t@ co” seat that the courts be rendered more effective |bureaucratic tendencies. It is readily accessible to Py aenlast thi e eppointment of sure-fire judges. When that |® Portion of the country that uses it for selfish ends 4g et it will be time to think of repealing | to the disadvantage of the sections more remote, which so far seems to act as a deter-| A nation’s capital may not be located as ours is haps they'd called up | if he'd deen around? "Then! track ‘him—find Sand; trace his mov

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