The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR T he Bismarck Tribune | vit co much to further the eause of commercial % An Independent Newspaper ytaskantein te 2 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | New Values EE ced elle dR Day by day our sense of value changes, Day Mes * Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | day we come to detest what we once admired and to Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at | admire what we once detested. The fast moving Bismarck as second class mail matter. 3 i chimera we call life is so ever changing in its ka-| {George D. Mann... ~:President and Publisher | jaitsscopie effeets that we become dazed, blinded, | “Subscription Rates Payable in Advance _, und we awake to find that the morals, the Haran Daily by carrier, per year .. . $7.20! and the values of yesterday are no longer appli- ‘Daily by mail, per year, (in -+ 7.20; cable to the new order and we reluctantly adapt our | re a ber year, | ideas, morals and values to the changed conditions. ‘Daily by taal, outside ot North Dakota, 2... 600! Nothing could illustrate this more clearly than Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ‘the comparison recently afforded when Rudolph | Valentino, film actor, and President Emeritus Eliot, | ; ; . of Harvard university, both died within a few hours es at teeabhenns as etteet oe uae ot each other. Valentino was a moving picture created to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-{actor, 31 years old, Dr. Eliot was a noted educator, per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin ; 92 years old, and a man who had been in the public , published herein. All rights of republication of all eye all his life. Yet every newspaper in the coun- | other matter herein are also reserved, _.| try, almost without exception, devoted more space | aa Rep | and more prominent space to Valentino’s demise | than to Dr. Eliot’s. | And not only in this country, but abroad also. ' English newspapers and French newspapers used | vast quantities of material on Valentino, and in| { many cases but three lines on Dr. Eliot. | But, you say, the fame of Dr. Eliot is lasting, it =| will endure; that of Valentino ephemeral. But can; ‘you prove it? Ten years from now will people re- | member Eliot more than Valentino? | ;. in| And as for material success, Valentino died pos- | next one. What this one docs, the next one is it cali UAvainGaTCAlllarnio ocala oNEETOE | Bieter to say anyehing abodt unit Tong eeu sessions valued at nearly one million dollars. Could | it is too late to do anything. The next one can Dr. Wir eden tie seme? sas sore as it likes about the way this one has treated There’s no use fighting against it. Our values 3 Member of The Associated Press fear Foreign Representatives . LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY cuicago DETROIT ‘Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ; PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH YORK Po eet ae Fifth Ave, Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) More Debt Troubles 4 This generation has one great advantage over the i j The first sign of winter is always just about a| welcome as the first sign of summer. Wish oysters would hurry up and get back from their vacation. It’s a convincing argument—for this generation. The next one might not be knocked over by it quite so readily, but it isn’t necessary to convince the next. one. It isn’t here yet. Cheer up, however, Next Generation! You'll have a chance to do the same thing to subsequent generations. The Way of Human Nature (Minneapolis Tribune) The United States today. stands rather aghast at the contradictoriness: of human nature. It has dis- it, but this one will be dead; hence won't care a oe late Chatphie: Wesnay roving pletibeabgors more For instunce, Chairman Madden of the appropria- | than we do educators because we value them more ‘tions committee of the house of representatives, calls and we are more affected by the death of the former | payment of the national debt. Congressman Mad-] yo part of the human race, but it represents the | Sden points out that, at the present rate, the whole! trend in a complete change of values that must be | thing will be liquidated in about 20 years. recognized and in some manner combated, ‘rather shocks Congressman Madden, He never heard of such a thing. Besides Europe will still be tremitting to us, annually, what she owes us. It will! ‘gress to waste, points out Congressman Madden. It will also be irritating to Europe, to see us rolling chica a ‘in money she is pinching herself to supply us with.; Money talks, but a dollar doesn’t say much to a Wouldn’t it be better for all concerned, queries the | ——_—_—— | scongressman, to slow up on the wiping out of the Procrastination is the thief of success. national debt? Pass some of it on to the next gen- | ——___—_——_ eration, because then it won't have all that trouble Editorial Comment with extravagant congresses. Neither will it be| bothered by so much European jealousy. ! (St. Louis, Mo., Globe-Democrat) policy will reduce this generation’s taxes. Another In the building of Missouri's new hard-surfaced * curious thing—Madden assumes that Europe will highways probably little thought was given to the pay what she owes us. fire. None the less, this is one of the numerous advantages that have accrued from the program that lifted the state out of the mud. When a blaze ! calls were sent to the fire departments at Festus and at St. Louis, and soon fire apparatus from these ST cities combined with that at De Soto in fighting the | The king and queen of Belgium were motoring’ $115,000, would doubtless have been much greater. from Brussels to a seaside resort near Bologne. Hel The distance from St, Louis to De Soto is about was driving and she was sitting beside him. Just! forty-five miles. The two St. Louis: fire trucks: machine, The car swerved against the railing cf a] speed, making the run, it is reported, in ninety min- | smajkbridge, staving in the wheels and bending the! utes. It was a splendid demonstration of the abili- fenders. Luckily, the railing held and the king and; ty of local fire fighters to meet an emergency of Since the two were alone in the car, no one knows | °f how distance is wiped out by good roads and dif- what teally caused the accident. As a matter of| ferent parts of a state brought into close touch with ccnjesture, however, one may surmise that the|¢ach other. Concrete roads, extending over most of | missed that last car by half an inch.” And Albert floor and considerably smoother than the average was saying, “I’m driving this car. I’ve driven it city street made it possible for local fire fight- ithousands of miles without an accident.” And just| i"€ equipment to get there in ample time to render jerash occurred. By enlarging to such an extent the radius within ; is i ich metropolitan fire departments can render as- Perhaps this is all wrong and they were not talk- wae i ‘ing at all. Then one can imagine Albert's mind| *i#tance to outlying towns imperiled by flames, im- to remeve feelings of natural antagonism that still ing so well lately. There doesn't seem to be much)... of a future in it. So perhaps Albert was driving, | S=i#* in some degree between people of the country *Wtig“and thinking about tckinic an doth: oiber and people of the cities. Nothing is so likely to 4 ; 2 ; good fellowship as assistance efficiently rendered .,, The point, however, is an auto is a mechanical in a time of danger, ing. It doesn’t share your triumphs or your troubles. It has no idea of what an important per- je steering wheel wrong the car goes into the ditch; st the. same as when a beggar pulls the steering heel rai. ton ‘President Coolidge to discuss details of the Ye-! for the same reason. Perhaps it’s a false step on | The idea of a country without a national deb: simply pile up in the tre a temptation to con- | sto play at ducks and drakes with it. tax collector, eration. It will be a good thing for the next gen- Incidentally—this is a mere bagatelle—such a! Highways and Fire Protection increased protection that they would extend against was discovered in De Soto at 3 a. m. emergency The King Did Wrong! | flames. Without this aid, the damage} estimated ‘at outside of Calais, they turned out to pass another} that responded to the call for aid traveled at high| queen-escaped without injury. this kind, but it was an equally fine demonstration queen was saying, “Albert, do be careful now. You| their route, and affording a roadbed as level as a then, being a little upset by the conversation, the| Service. twas elsewhere. The king business hasn’t been do-| P0Ved Toads may tend, as they do in other ways, (ine of. work. : supplant such feelings with a sense of unity and Sxbnage you may happen to be. When a king pulls | " Ris “| covered that there is nothing more dangerous than " You might remember this. No matter who you | to do somebody a good turn. , keep your mind on what you are doing when! As the result of a certainly not inconsiderable i jou are driving an auto. | Provocation, we not long ago intervened in a general} uropean war. At the time we intervened, two/| groups of nations were about deadlocked. Our in-| ‘ tervention soon forced a decision, the first group | fore the modern age began, but when the an-/ going down to humiliating defeat, the second emerg- ents, composed the saying they little thought that|ing triumphant. One would assume, therefore, that | y,80me day man would almost do that very thing. the second group would feel for us sentiments of #Only_ in today’s instance man has hitched his air-{ undying, gratitude, while the first group would | . Plane to a parachute and come safely to earth. never cease to think of us in any terms save those | | “A unique achievement,” it has been described.|°f eternal hatred. Yet, strangely enough, the first But it is really more than that. It is another mile- | 8'OUP now manifests no particular hostility towards | and | prominent one on the road toward safe | Ui While the second group hardly ever lets a day go i wigation of the air. In this instance a’giant par- | >Y without giving us some new evidence of its fierce | onus brought a plane and pilot, together weigh. | dietie of us, | et 1,800 pounds, to the ground, only fracturing the! It is all very puzzling. What would have hap-| ditig gear and scarcely jarring the pilot. : i, The immense value of this experiment is immedi- b ‘seen, If this can be done once it can be done | in and the day may soon be here when every irplane will have strapped to its upper wing and A Unique Achievement se: “Hitch your wagon to a star” was an old saying, ‘pened if we had reversed our course? Suppose we had loaned the central Powers roughly ten billion dollars; suppose we had fufnished them with a mil- lion fighting men suppleniented by @ promise. of. millions to follow; suppose we had turned the scales | in their favor, making it possible for them to crush; Britain, France and Italy to the earth. Suppose that the central powers had then destroyed or ap- Propriated the enemy fleets, seized the enemy col-' onjes, and imposed staggering indemnities upon the conquered countries. Would we have been popular would be hating America furiously because America had not done more intervene in a debated will be this: Vin” with them? Apparently not. Apparently they |r THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CEASE FIRING ! | SURRENDER - IF You Ler NE HONE NY WAY YAN Carolyn Welle BEGIN HERE TODAY mysteriously appear and disap- pear in the HEATH household next door one night, the-next Harbor Gardens, ind, is agog with the murder MYRA pepe el ne ihe a pearance er ind, PERR pee House guests of the Heaths ste LAWRENCE INMAN, heir jo -Myra‘s fortune, and BUNNY- Moore, vivacious, golden- haired, to whom suspicion points use of her questions. Myra Heath was peculiar. She Rever used cosmetics, never wore colors. She had i | the murderers used | to kill her. Candles were burn- ing at her head and feet and a casd marked, “Th erry Heath.” Strang- | e wan heavily mgde up with rouge. The . pecul thing about th’s disappearance is that all he windows and doors had been lucked on the inside the night before and were found that way in the morni Finger prints | of Bunny Moore and Inman were found on the bottle. At the Country Club, the der is discussed by SAM DERSON, Heath's rival foi club presidency; AL CUNN: HAM, who is trying to solve the crime, and others, ie believ Heath the murderer. Anderso: disagrees, TODHUNTER BUCK, nephew of Mrs. Prentiss and in love with Bun suggests to Cunningham that Heath also have jurdered. is azed to get a Ee call from Heath. He calls er again, Inman is guilty, Bunny faints under grilling by Detective Mott. man confides to Buck that he saw Bunny ascending the stai after the m mur- AN murder. = M think Bunny is Cunninghi Anderson and goes to his house where Perry Heath suddenly ap- pears out of the night and be- gins to talk. Anderson invites Cunningham his house and there, whil for his host, Cunning: suddenly confronted Fave 4 ~ by dissppen) ny mystcriously an | appea' Shortly afterward Anderson comes in and he upbraids Cun- ningham for not detaining Heath. Buck determines to clear Bun- ny and has a talk with her, but ste refuses to be truthful. He lares love, but she sighs and turns away. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXVII, Buck looked after Bunny, sorely toned to follow, but concluded not to, feeling it was better to’ let her think things over: by herself. went. back to hig chair on the h, where sheltered by the clus- tering vines, he sat and smoked numberless cigars. His aunt came out and said, in her crisn way: : “Come, Toddy Boy, it’s late. You can think about her in your dreams instead of catching your death of cold out on this porch. Come along “No, Aunt Em. You run along to bed, and I'll go up when f get feady. Leone sie door open, I'll lock it when in.’ On all right, have you own way, | but if you get hay fever, don’t lame | met” “Ll won't. Good night, Suptie dear.” ia “Good night, Boy. You'll find any- ed you aig ie oe pate Af so Ly you can think of anything. so ie as + Buck smiled at his aunt’s intui- tion, ‘lend her vaiery, bola ‘nigh ay y hd hours, unheeding | that tittle | she had a sec i Le ee refusal to anuwePsabe' = 6 ' nm | | shoes and stockings, and she walked | to took i a | - War's Over, If— : PUTNAM SOnt ing, and sat, almost motionless, giv- ing himself up to dreams far re- MRS. PRENTISS sees lights [ime from detectives and murder. ; mystefies, How sweet and dear she was! And stful smi betokened her uttgr innocence, t, it was that she was Idifig. somebs istaken sense of;.duty. ret,-he had a: right to, for hi tives were all for her good, hi only hers, from now on ani 0] ‘ his awful investigation, an end, some day shg e to go or come as Then she would go hom ‘und’ He would follow. He would meet her people, interview her father, and all would ‘be shipshape and Whether it was the mental picture, of the wedding feast, or the increas- [ing chill of the night air, turned his thoughts to Rig gunt had. xo casually referred to: VER Vas just contemplating « move in that mething pantry ireetion, when he saw some one coming out of the front door. The door had been closed, though | i mot locked, and the one who came through it was Bunn; | Bunny! yes, surely, He sat very still, his eyes almost starting from his ‘head, Was shé, {could she be, walking in her sleep? No, he saw at once that she was ot. She hed on a dark frock, and black sen, looking about her as she at . Sne could not see Buck, as he sat | back in the shadow, and he made no sound, so that she did not even pause. that way. She went softly, slowly, but stead- ily on, to the edge of the porch and | down the steps. As she went down the path to the CISTEN, Wve Got To Tew You. —that alone} Ig Well, he-would ‘discover her sec-| SONGTHING & WANT . THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1926 | my mother thinking that I was work- “A} ing.” | wen deoked at Mamie, with Intergat, lering what wi iy ee mother found out she was. 7) Jon, work! I knew that would never believe anything but worst of her own daughter if sh reallsed that Mr. Tremain had loan- | long time before you saw him the| ed her money enough to complete (other night,” I admonished. “It had} her musical education, { been two years since you ran away! Although I didn’t tell | reg jth - Sait Sa . | 3, Ne oat ee that iy now it, Judy, but you _nevet juddy’ Tremain’s wife weuld make | will know how I wanted him ‘every| trouble for her. oe day and every hour while we were; All the time we had been talking { parted. I thought he fo ‘otten| I had packed up my few possessions. jme. Sometimes J almost believed; for I had determined to move out to that he never had loved me. Joan's home that evening. Some- “Now that I know he had been) how I was certain that we would not wanting me quite I ‘had! go abroad for some months, longed for him, and had been had just locked my trunk, strap- ‘happy all the time, it makes it just ey my suit case and tied up my that much harder for me. at_box when Jerry called. She could not hold the tears back wanted to talk any longer. She just put her “Father said you down on my shoulder and sobbed. An te me, Judy,” said Jerry. “l Ralf wanted to say that my soon ag she could speak she sai {5 “I am afraid, Judy, I'm afra' new employer insists upon my going 1) to the theater with her and some just seem to feel that Robert's wife! friends tonight,” i is watching me every minute.” ou'll get over that,” I said “Did you tell her that you had comfortingly. “Are you sure that promised to go with me?” i “I couldn't very well do that, you have seen her since he left?” “Yes, once, I saw her in if on | Jerry.” | “Phen you're going?” the other side of the street as I came away from my musie lesson, and I am sure that her car followed Slop The SHOOTIN: / | SURRENDER = IF You's GONCEDE - The iciory 7 Mwy “You have lived without him for a Mami “AIT Fight, ‘po te 104 And he rang oft, (Copyright, 1926, NEA. Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: Good-bye to. Mamie. New York, Sept. 2.—Those garish, carnivalien electric signs that the world has come to know as “the { great white way” are surrendering— | as is all New York—to the crafting | necks of the new steel ints, | Another generation, coming to see treet of frivols” will find a# way, but the “gay” will be missing. * The shadow of the future alread, begins to be cast by the gigantic irders which slowly encircle the roadway zone, creating those amdiz- , but) ing canyons in which scurry the mid- ha th come from Bunny’s home with mes-! ‘ioe te their coming, the old Lighting effects ure sages or warnings or heln of some order. changes. match the maj how could he believe her in all ways innocent, when she would do such a thing as this? He tried to find an explanation. But if this interview were in the in- terests of law and justice, why so secret the meeting? Why so late en hour? So stealthy a.departure from the house? { It was inexplicable. Tod began toj feel a rising anger,—yes, even his Bunny could arouse his resentment at this treatment of his proffered dn’t she confided in jim go with her to see; Then he bethought himself of an-; other explanation, and his wrath| turned to great and grievous woe. Suppose this man were Bunny's lover! Suppose it all had nothing to do with the murder mystery, that this chap, confound him, side gate, Buck rose and quietly fol- lowed her. He felt no hesitancy about doing this, he‘ was her protector and he meant to watch over her. It was not necessury to be very cautious, for the soft lawn deadened his steps, and apparently she had no thought she was not alone. Across the lawn. she made for the small piece of woods that was not far awa: In the shelter of a tree Toddv wait. ed, and then as went into the woods, he cautiously followed, vu at a disten He had no wish to pry, but also,’ ee must see that no danger came to er. As she. disappeared in the deep shadows, he edged nearer, and’ saw, with: a sudden pang at his ‘heart, that she met somebody, and’ that somebody was man. Like a flash, Buck embered the letter Bunny had received. at lunch j time. -How.-she had read it without comment, but with, he remembered, | @ heightened color, and a queer lit- tle frown. sort in her dreadful dilemma. | created to Maybe they were affianced sweet-' these weirdly beautiful achievements hearts, and the girl had only been) of the toiler. Most impossibly incon- flirting with him, and, he had to ad-! gruous would be an electric river of mit, she haq done very litle of thet.| toothpaste flowing across the side Indeed, she had really repulsed) of one of these skyscrapers. And, him, and it may have been only his! elimi ig .the incongrui thera i is no place for signs on these 36 and 45-story buildings. Lighting rangements will take on an artistic quality. Sheer breath taking beauty will replace the gar- ishness of. the present. Indirect and diffused lights will throw streams of shaded gold into the towers of the new ing 1 ion that made him hope she} would yet turn to him with ‘love and | affection. He knew little about her, his in- tuitions might not be true ones, ma she was the typical flapper of whom he heard so much end #0 often, Z ell, he must know @ little more,’ and with a feeling of defi: is| architeciure which gives so cubistic own better nature, lie ico a tone to Manhattan’s present sky- nearer the pair in the line. . si . They now sat on a falJen log, ear- dd id in conversation. The man “who runs the bright id not make out, the tenor! lights” was telling me ubout it the of their talk. He hated himself for; other day. trying to, but ‘weil r, and though he could see only shad owy outlines of their figures, he sal managed ‘to make’ out a few. “Don’t you care?” Bunny said,/ passionately, her voice raised a trifle, Could it have béen.from this man, making an appointment for, ,this meeting? Buck was sure that it not only could have been, but was, is heart was torn with fears, He: d to keep his faith in Bunny, but. she had left the house’ secretly, and ern oo n't recognize the a see, Broadway, like Street, has an improvement as: Only very-late. She had come to’ meet a\us if in amazed agony. “Have you) the matters of signs and valsdee pe who te ve aged for her-in a/ no pity, ne regret? Oh, I don't know | light. lark, lonely wood. at to . Just now, Fam told, the “bright It didn’t seem ‘as if much more} “Don't thi dear,” were needed to make the girl blame-| man's voice said ne tea” the} High hayereached a saturation worthy beyond power, of explanation He watched through the darknes: not. daging, nor. indeed wishing to go neager;‘and. it seemed to him that Buek could nat piece that. voice, it oe was unfamilier, ugh he. realised he might have heard jow death, delir- ard it. before. “But I can't be still and say noth- ium marks its prog: And Broad i t, is a de- the two human shadows merged into] ; of te} Frag eee dove pe ag nl set i oe “at tend pose name “white tl mi 8 @ ra an as she wo ronde no resistance to. such condi-| agri, mam At that, clapped his hand| way” was becoming ross het uth. tongue, Broad: pete’ “vith acl ir mouth. f H Ie, ‘was content wi “Hush!” he said, “I faneled Eheard| one or two ant’ si 3 and a myriad a sound. Somebody may. about.” | Jesser »; rs. "Then the gyrations (Te Be 5 of a couple of chewing gum imps PRE: centered the attention of the eye. Now there is optical chaos. A scintil- off its endless tions. soddy turned sick at heart. This was the girl he loved, worshiped, adored, to the point of idolatry. But this was also the girl honored, respected and believed. innocent. of ‘any guilty knowledge or connivance in her friend's death. What was the truth? For once | eaeee power of discernment was at fault. | He knew not what to think,— what to, believe. More than willing to ible benefit intative of 5] seems to have been grabbed by signsters. | x But the shadows of giants creep slowly over the see The Paramount hallding begins to out the sky at 44th street and 42nd sf to be flanked by stee) ig At Lexington. avenue bar building, which will And, while it doesn’t. niatter, the whole’ Damm family in .New York h its nme changed te-Gorman, — Anything can in. a boxer, fintd for muggle perfame into Engl: Corset firm in Niagara Falls robbed of $10,000," Imagine a corset firm with so much money! * Detroit man shooting at a, rat, hit! th 18 neighbor. It would be best to shoot at a neighbor and hit a rat. German scientist has a new cure for: malaria. rt of the old one, whisky and roots, was popular, ing witnout lothgs wan’ not char out n arg- Sa with impei ing~ 2” woman. p In Kentucky ne they will ive -Bunny the doubt, Kid Lewis, trying to = THE 4220! iting their shadows across the glaring brilliance and jirsceating. the end of the “gay white way’ and the dawn of the age of “glow!” —GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) imagine that he can nd by it A good ei ct. hag! means, th .Ds- A ear the evi kote. - Id talk a cortal ssy “Bathing suits are terrible. bi - eet ree be all right ws Hard work will gain you promo- in almost. any lise ain! th i has too many kinfole The man who bitched to a-star has a son who to a meteor, Restaurants serve ‘sueh, poor i mont marry ‘ thei from the delicsteaten( his wagon hitches his) pars: Sid a oe you travel the more quickly age ovei you! ( Service, Ine.) ht, 1906 NEA. wv Rome. batterflies have no. mouths f ieee belef lives, 5 H

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