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‘PAGE FOUR. The Bismarck Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published a A the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck’ as second class mail matter. George D. Mann. ..» President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year «$7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... Daily by mail, per year, state outside Bismarck). il, outside of Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to; the use for republication of all news dis; credited to it or not otherwise credited in t per, arid also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter here reserved, ; Foreign Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT Kresge Bldg. BY souls AND SMITH Fifth Ave, Bldg. G. CHICAGO ‘Tower Bldg. PAYNE, NEW_YORK - - (Official Ci , State oe Luh Newitre) se = = : Be Irving Berlin : “Trving Berlin and his wife, the former Miss Ellin Mackay, have returned to American soil, after sev- “ral months spent in ried fife so far a veritable nightmare. They sailed For_their home land incognito, but their secret was | ut Quebec, Canada, | “discovered and when they landed they =were met by American newspapermen who proved so obnoxious that the Berlins were forced to flee t a waiting motor car to get away from them. | Because of that these newspapermen adopted a felitt}ing tone in their news stories the next day and conveyed the impression that Mr. Berlin was Getting too big for his boots. They took obvious Pleasure in raking up his lowly beginnings and the @ifficalties through which he forced his way to the top of his profession, not to lend him added glory, Amt to make him scem less to the readers of their articles. Sf this conduct they but carried out an attitude which has quite di: ted the American public. whicl® quite sympathizes with the Berlins in their marital venture and deplores the virtual persecu- Ciotf they have been under at the hands of the Amer- jean newspapers. News is news. The marriage of Irving Berlin and | Ellin Mackay was big news, both because of the | circumstances and the persons involved, but that} shoulg have furnished no excuse for the actual per- | Secution which followed their marriage. They were hesieged with reporters, and many of them not gen-/ flemen. They fabricated stories and misquoted both Mr. Berlin and Mrs. Berlin until they had been! placed in many embarrassing positions. Then they sgwent abroad to get away from the situation. They “remained in England until they thought that no! one would be particularly interested in their affairs. ; They returned to find the persecution and annoy- Bhce continuing. There is no excuse for this. It is possible to get the news and yet not persecute any- one; -Good newspapers do not do that sort of thing. z Case After Case! When the Truman H. Newberry case came to ay Voveip the United States senate in 1922 and 46 Re- publican senators voted to seat Newberry—which did seat him, though he resigned subsequently— nebody had any idea how much trouble was ahead for the senators who cast those Newberry votes. ,_ The. opposition has hammered them for it ever Since.* Nor has the hammering been without effect. Fourteen of said senators had been beaten, either “Gn primaries or at the polls, up to the middle of Au- it. . Two were not candidates for renominations, haps because they knew they couldn't get them if they tried. “= Against the 13 who were in the running in mid-Au- gust, their Newberry votes were thein heaviest handicap. The rest of the 46 died in office—nine of them—or have been re-elected or do not face the Voters until 1928, All in all, it was a terribly heavy political mortality rate. Now two more Newberry cases are promised for _Bext year, only much worse—the cases of William Scott Vare of Pennsylvania and Frank L. Smith of Winois. is, of course, is assuming that Vare and Smith ‘gre clected, but the former comes from an almost | overwhelmingly and the latter from a very strongly Republican state. If they win, the senate Republi- cans undoubtedly will need them badly, but will a} {majority dare to vote to seat them, after what has happened to so many of those who voted tog eat Newberry ? ‘: And Newberry’s campaign expenses were small i@hange, compared with Vare’s and Smith's. Plenty of far-seeing Republicans wish to high heaven that +¥are ‘and Smith would retire from the senatorial _ Face, but there are few signs that they will. They ' pont a great deal, yes, their backers say, but poli- is expensive now—legitimately, not corruptly Why should they quit? $ Farm Aid , For.a considerable period of time we have been fd totbelieve that the cure for the farm depression i fizgusghout the west and middle west was in federal F ntion for the maintenance of prices, and so in Legislation was to be the panacea for all But the former governors of Kansas and ipereats dispute this claim and advance the cause “of the’ farm slump in Iowa in_particular as the re- of real estate speculation, and they claim that cannot cure that’ particular disease. y much speculation is being experienced in this mn that it has upset normal ideas of values. tly there may be much reason in this Why not a federal survey, by experts, of “west farming situation? Perhaps a few be better than all this surmise. 's diplomacy United States proposed to gland in an attempt to get | away from the publicity that has made their mar- | j | ing for its own sake. 7 reduction in tariffs, to let foreign products into the’ United States, and possibly a modification of Ameri- |! can immigration restrictions—a few things like that. ! They are not definitely proposed yet, but they are! t hinted at. Hitherto, since the war, the Europcon powers have been on the outside, looking into the United States and asking for things. Now the United States is on the outside of the world court, looking jin, and asking what the price of admission is. In- idications are that it will be high, or the U. S. A. j will stay on the ottside. Greek Fascism { With the bloodless overthrow of Gen. Theodore Pangalos, dictator of Greece, who assumed control of the government fourteen months ago and im-' es | posed a Mussolini regime upon the ‘country, Greece | returns to constitutional government and an era of | personal liberty, eschewing the control of a despot and declaring for law and order and the voice of the people in government, The dictatorship of Pangalos was the last of Eu- rope’s post-war dictatorships tu be formed and is the first to fall. The Nationalist party is now in complete control of the situation, according to lat- est advi and will take immediate steps to return |the nation to a normal status, Perhaps it might not be unwise for Premier Mus- isolini to look across the arm of the Mediterranean that separates Italy from Greece and meditate a few minutes on what has happened in the latter country. There is a certain limit beyond which freemen will not be forced. Just now Mussclini is Irresistible in Italy. But will he always be so? gis he, per- haps, too self-confident, too contemptuous of the op- position? The High-flier! , | The news from Francé is that M, Callizo has broken the world’s altitude record. - He stepped into plane at 5 o'clock one afternoon and took out down the field. Tilting the wings he mounted swiftly among the clouds. When his instruments showed he was eight miles above the egrth, he probably said to himself, “Well, here I am, higher than any human has ever been. Guess I'll ‘turn arcund.” So ke descended. ” ‘Two hours and 25 minutes after taking off Callizo landed at Le Bourget. In this short time he had done what no man ever had been able to do before. Suppose something had gone wrong with his plane? If you want an idea of how far he would have fallen, start out and walk cight miles. Of course even this record will be broken in the future when better airplanes have been built. But just at present, it is an astounding feat. Man watched the birds for millions of years before he learned to fly one inch himself. BEGIN HERE TODAY Sinica a ae sees ify mysteriously appear 2 pedr in the HEATH spouschetd — — one night, and the Fad Garden: (lana h ind, tet agor with the macnn Might’s Master | | | (St. Paul Dispatch) of MYRA peer! and the dis- Fighting is supposed to be a relic of the less a| = “ her hus! vanced stages of civilization before direct action was ‘Gaede .questeof; the: Meat supplanted by the rule of law. That is a false no- tion. Nowhere does the idea of direct action exist in a more pure state than on the plane of the pro-! fessional prize figbt. It is the glorification of fight-j ere LAWRENCE INMAN, helt ~ Myra’s fortune, and BUNNY haired, to whom suspicion point: | oo of her refusal to anaver | At the same time it is the) “nue. Myra Heath pect gitrification of the rule of law. Witness the maneu-| sever wend eaumenion eevek ome vers that are necessary before a champion of the} colors. She had a mania for col- j | i= world can be brought into the ring to face a chal-j pry ms Po seae Rows nae ord lenger. lection that the murderers used First, there must be a contract, usually two or to kill her. Candles were burn- ing at her head and fect and three of them with two or three different challeng-} yearby was a card marked, “The ers. The very basis of the affair, if it ever comes] eat of ‘all, she’: Bat ook i off, is threfore in law. Then there must be an in-| up with rouge. junction. Appeal is made to learned judges. De- The peculiar thing about | murrers are filed, exceptions taken, and whereas’s Seo Sanenonrance sibel a4 | and wherefores fly around at a furious rate. Law- yers argue and fine points are weighed. After months and sometimes years of court action, the law on the questioned is settled. Then for a few min- utes the champion and challenger meet, and there is either a new champion or one challenger less. But direct action has bowed before the rule of locked on the inside the night | before and were found that way | in the morning. Finger prints . of Bunny Moore and found on the bottle. At the Country Club, the mur- | der is discussed by SAM AN- | DERSON, Heath's rival for the club presidency; AL CUNNING- HAM, who is trying to solve the others. Some Inman were | law. The homage is even exaggerated perhaps, but] crime, ai believe certainly there can be no doubt as to which is the pe lag Fel greater of the two, There is no need to worry abput| nephew of Mrs. Prentiss and in love with Bunney, suggests to Cunningham that” the rule of law, so long as prize fighting exists to Heath also ~~ wee ee Santerrd. enhance its prestige. Let us rather worry about prize fighting. set a ie e call ‘trom teat Heath. wtte eae ————_____ phon The Legion Tackles a Big Thing eellty.* Bunny Ge wader 0 (Minneapotis Journal) ee ie ie Mek ie On the occasion of the state convention of the American Legion at Mankato recently, The Journal took occasion to,comment |on the active interest shown by the veterans’ organization in public mat- saw Bunny ascending the stairs | after the carder, and Mott tions bee os ctingey Pig maid, el ing the grounds the night of the ters, as shown by some of the resolutions adopted. think Peas 5 s ir "aera vi But the Legion does not content itself with merely ‘ Sroniorhen gets - uate from whereasing and resolving. It shows the healthy] {pete Perry aie eee American spirit of doing things. Next month the} pears oul Gf the night sad. be: Legion begins a nation-wide campaign to get the| ins to talk, Anderson invites Cunning- ham to his house and there, while waiting for his host, Cunning- American voter to the polls on election day. That is a man-size job, and a mighty important one. The Legion, of course, will pay no’ attention to] pam, Mi saddenly, confronted by issues or candidates. As an organization commit- mysteriously as he had ted to abstention from partisan politics, it will con-| Shortly | afterward, | Anderson centrate on the task of rousing the citizen slacker ‘Contlestns * toc letting Heath cut of his sloth. wet away. That sloth has been growing and spreading of Pilg ally oes sgt is laotersolned late years, until we have reached a point in many instances of entrusting the conduct of government to minorities. The power of political bosses in such states as Pennsylvania and Illinois is directly dependent on! vote-slacking. The boss has a compact organiza- tion and always gets out his full vote. But in many cases that would be far from enough to give him victory, if the people generally went to the polls and registered their opinions, Minnesota casts in well contested elections from Fre 10 Be OO of the gomntiie vote ie ae census, & better record than neighbor states have—Wisconsin: and North Dabota, for in- 4 stance, where the conservative vote seems to have become authabaaag and indifferent, But it is too have a good talk with her. nd the object of Toddy’s anxious thought came and seated| if on a low chair beside his| own. So softly had she come, that | he had no idea of her presence until | he her soft, low voice saying: | “Mra, Prentiss bid me come and talk to you for a few minutes ‘before i g°, 10 to my room.” “I’m glad to have you,” he said,’ speaking quietly, too,’ and widen layii hand op, the little wish you could!” : To, is i hand tightening il de y0e sea ke sheet ane exclaimed clasp | i ss had enough of that for the 400, want to avoid the-subject, but } you need help, \ 8 | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Z a BEUEVE NE, Sun. TANF ANIMAL AIN'T | GOING T’ WIN.NO RACE ON A WEP Track / pb ti98? ayao te 29m oh, Bunny, do con must have hel Dear Heart, tell me! I've nothing to te’ she spoke really caldly, accent of. displeasure. with clues and things, people questions.” “Both methods are used,” Toddy was stern and grave. “I can't—oh, me a—about it! Her. I can’t—don’t of coyness or shyne: Don’t!” soul spoke to soul, power of reading the intent of an other’s words, Buck believed her. | Ho turned to face-her move fully. “Do phnch snow you are in danger Grave dan, ‘on the porch floor, } tell me Buck felt ? get a better chance and mivst find out some things. “ “T suppose I am. . But ‘what can| you go downstairs | and come I do? 1 am very much alone——" | again lute that night? After you Her voice quivered and tears came, your room for the night into the blue eyes. “No,” Buck declared, “you are not ave two staunch friends ind one of us, at) least;-would:die for you!” is was dangerously close to! melodrama, but was saved therefrom by Toddy’s obvious earnestness and | the ringing note of a fection in his | tone. But Bunny shuddered. “Dont mention death,” no—of course, y should 1?” “Do you take: her word in pre! enee to mine?” also says he saw you.” “Larry said that!” grieved, rather than angry. then — it’s isn't Bravado had come to her aid. | air was almost saucy, her tone “and I,| most gay. Buck was annoyed. she suaid,} sent.” “So we have,” he. said, if I am to help you, and Lord knows I'll have to ask you! fli some pretty blunt questions.” “You may,” Bunny said, but her voice had taken on a cold formality, almost as if she spoke to an official detective. “Oh,” Tod groaned, “don’t s; a to me that way, or I can't tall all!” The girl laughed outright. “Go on with your blunt questions,’ she commanded, but the laught seemed to linger in her intonation. Tod plucked up 4 morsel of cour- age. Surely murderer could not ‘augh like that “When did you first see Mrs. Heath after she was dead?” he asked. “Oh, I can’t tell you that!” She ped as if in horrified surprise, } started to rise from her chair. “No, sit still. Don’t tell me any- thing ‘you don’t choose to, but do,— ants vy, dear,” he said, “I ci let. an go on like this! ‘And, before we go any further, something cise I must tell’ you. is all! win’ your How about it, little. sweetheart?” The fact that no repulse had his overtutes, de T he the girl to him. But’ she drew away, her gently pushing off “Don’ she whispet not now,—not yet. —oh, ‘Toddy, dear, know—" .you i You —I will help you, me all—all about “No, I did not. However, Inman she sounded “Well, his word against mine, and now an thought detectives found out the truth from not from asking and now “go you won’t help me to help you?” ask jittle hands twisted themselves | nervously together and one foot beat he he ‘Did up had t, I w I didn’t. But the maid said she saw you,” fers Her al- How could she treat such a serious matter so an’t too, there -is see. how I adore and worship you, and try to win your love in return. heoed "You don't know don’t WEDNESDAY. Her Own Way 23% han where you were, Tragedy al ou crying about, ked. “Surely now that you have everything that you wi jand have been able to borrow tw [2 -five thousand dollars from Buddy not | me me.’ for your musical Jucation, you ought to be happy that he's gone back to New York. You told me just the other day you were afraid to have him rye! here.” 1 know,” plicit; jone answered Mamie, tédacibnsty: “{ ‘suppose I should be very thankful that he has gone, but Judy, while Buddy hes gone, his wife is, staying on here.” ree that you're sayii Mr. Robert Trema one to New York, but his wife has ided to. med here indefinitely. The night before the left Buddy told me that lid had the worst quarrel they in their lives. “*You see, Mamie,’ he said, ‘I have never quarreled with my wife to any extent. She never seemed to care uron how many women I showered my attentions, provided I gave her plenty of money and, tet her do about ‘as she wished. You, my dear, are the cay woman she has ever honored with her jealousy. Since we've been in Chicago some of her dear catty friends have told her that: you were here and she accused me of following being innocent of life was ‘Laci 1 the other d ing decided to stay ang: me, teieeny to kno fluttering hands and held them close. “You're going to let me be your father con- fessor and your guide, philosopher and friend, as well as your. slave and adorer end—and, my. darling, your future husband.” She sighed, and for's thought she was going to her sweet self to his embrace, then she turned away from him, and with tears in -her voice she said: “No, Please don’t touch been resumed after T have to ,+oh, dear, but I'll go Suresh with it, too. I'll be’ with you every step of the way. You can depend! on me,—oh, Bunny, you can depend on met” “I well believe that,—but, no, I must go alone—aloni ‘And’ with that she left him aad) far a slowly back: and into the! jouse, « Some | jail for a few months. call it chicken You can't tell b ing out the father or daughter at New York, Sept. 1.—Scattered notes from a ramble about Manhat-; tan: One of the big public playgrounds on the. East Side. and peenue disap; f play. There's boss in family away for ne way fo ite in thy id at talking back. perhaps, in- ternationalist might find the solu. tion of their. problems. .>. questions here of creed or c Brown: skins black laytim rable vaisigtchs almost pressed pod Cael network of a bis! They wear cone ill-fitting et shining Tike al dirty mirror. . . .' On a skull | break cap the other # stained derby, | ‘his is @ puzzling scene yer pa- triarchs of another land/... thes stand an& shake: theiy ‘heads. Inside the wired arena is. hub-hub. « Voices otic chou The e| . They nothing, their young much they are merely shal their head: When they were boys hops and SEPTEMBER 1, 1926 by A GIRL A GIRL of TODAY followed Ue if I but I did not and I got very angry because she would * I told him,” aid her tite truth. and came to Chi- , Did you tent her that?’ ‘Yes,’ he exclaimed. that if she would ugh to think bese mi of her ered was she and not I wh t Ny were still in the city an i evil intent, was much hurt to be accused.’ “Ob. Judy, if you could have seen the tender smile of Budd; said it, I love him so, it isn’t wrong for me to love him, is it? Why, “ only time 1 ever kissed him a bade him goo tye “1 cannot understand how Tam ing to live without him. of his does not want him. She just wants his money and his name. “When he told me about her hav- here I at her that if he had judy, I think I would have gone New vgfork with, him.” {Of course, Mamie dear, 1 would] TOMORROW: Mamle’s Denger. “Yo re going to tell’ me all T ‘rs BARBS 1 See i By Tom Sims If things never turned out wrong you never would change your ways and things would turn out worse. In Syria, wer with the Druses has tign lasting two weeks. A returned tourist reports scenery was beautiful. At one place he saw a sign “Gas 15 Cents.” Pork is most expansive when they la Distance doean’t lend any ie ment when you: run out o! It's nice to think people are better \ than you know they are. Lots of people will interrupt a phonograph record to tell joying it. It takes. years to get a good reputa- had known said I ‘And I ex- when he "That wif lightful vaca- the oa ay Efficiency is ruining the world. | You can’t get a straw out of a ie vacuum cleaner to unstop your pipe. The man who gets by on his looks isn't going very far. people, will be skinny all their—lives i bone pont get sent to — Most of us have an idea that we could get rich on an i Jack Dempsey may not be uble to race! come buck; but- he certainly is. good an ed the smoke pour- windows whether it’s home, Ni idea. a man to be can send the jon. 4 | enchant- gas. | You just ‘simply. can’t teach an ‘ +! onion to held ite breath. : Trying to pueee a good man down iu about as hard as trying to keep a good for.nothing one up. It ought to be against the law to 4 ‘se prohibition laws. Some men tell their wives every- thing even when they don’t know it. you how came to! tion and only a few minutes to get a . . shoulders bad reputetion. went to push-carts. . ! 4 now young muscles: harden at ° . Young hearts stay young * don't grow old at 4... . sade? voices know no restraints, | New “bodies bein, created out of old blood: Id —_ sage from cannot —unders! TT beards’ shake wn “the. motions of thei Is. the way One-sixth of the Bepale live within 1 ing Cross. do not gold is concerned. ... caves remain the hidit place even as in the days when pi Some read the cook book to; see what to have for dinner when they should read the bank book. Perhaps the most difficult dormiae project under way is trying to grow oats. Weight reducers who succeed will be mad about it this winter. A Sollie gee goes far enough to. forget ome. (Copyright, 1926, NBA Service, Inc.) in Great les of Char- THEES ARE People WHO ARS WAS ALSO ICONSTANTCY BRASGING, AND L aa CISTSN TO m Pies buried their pieces of slate hed 1 treasure vaults, find a way of pd a speccasaiat (oie it ee to. thie, rat corridor ny the wal . Add.to thi a mirror at