The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 27, 1926, Page 4

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oan orc aR! Ee Foreign Representatives {thoughts of some men run. And you can’t argue E carcaZolOCA® PAYNP COMPANY sport | with men who think like that. They have been too Tower BI Kresge Bldg. | deeply hurt. : AND SMITH They have lost their only sons. = N Tt) (Official City, State and County Newspape: i & ae ; © gasoline pHiortage. |/ ae ~ ing’ offered as a piece of standard machinery. Re- | subcrdination, He Aton tt _ rious predicament in a very few years. ae oe 0. ba Sa | an we PUR TREE OMT NE Ont ee = and its consequent effect upon the supply of gaso- “ substitutes for the gasoline, i = yet to be . and not a federal functicn and should r PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 2: (Established 1873) j line: “Second Lieutenant J. Kipling, 27-09-1915.” That, perhaps, is the whole pathetic story. The | were killed in action. And there is this significant! light went out for Rudyard Kipling when his hand- | | | | Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, | some young son was slain. | Biemirek, N. D., and entered at the pontoffice at!” |. Kipling died in the battle of Loos. The Irish -President and Publishes | guards had gone to the front in the first months of Subseription Rates Payable In Advance the war. Daily by carrier, per year ... $7 Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, utside sense yember Audit Bureau of Cireul f The Associated Press ‘i i The Auaintel “Press is exclusively entitled to Life has been ashes in the mouth fer the famous the use for republication of all news dispatches | father ever since. Like some cther Englishmen, credited eS oe uae Sy ek a prtatiectss He pe | perhaps he holds America responsible, e local news of 3} pe aha herein: All rights of republication of al? ; other matter herein are also reserved. . 1.20| Young Kipling at first was reported wounded and | missing. Like many other fathers, Rudyard Kip- 5 6,00; ting hoped against hope. . Then came the day when the war office corrected the first report to read ; “killed in action.” even early in 1915, the lives of hundreds of thou- }sands might have been saved. dg. woh YNE, BURNS AND Fifth Ave: Bldg. | High Flying Banned Flying too high is an offense in the army, the A Wood-burning Auto With the ever threatening shortage of petroleum | verdict of dismissal by a court-martial in the case of Captain William M. Randolph of the air corps, was commuted to a reprimand by President Cool- idge. rts made not only to find | a synthetig way, but also to evolve some entirely new ideas that would enable transportation, to be carried on in spite of a line, there have been eff | isting air condition the army regulations, i much higher than was nece y under the ex- ething that is forbidden by Certainlg{one of the most promising developments | Reorted is embodied in a wood-burning | automobile now being offered to the French public | by the Bleriot company. The car has proven such | an experimental success that the finished car is be- The penalty may have med quite harsh and dces seem harsh to the civilian, serve as an object lesson to discourage further in- cently a fourteen seat bus of this type made a com-* , And in the matter of flying too high the army is | plete circuit of France, 3,280 miles, at a fuel cost perfectly right. Each hundred feet a plane flies of $15. {higher than absolutely necessary, increases the ‘The fuel, strange to say, is simply wood or char- | chance of accident. Each plane that crashes costs con) heated to a high temperature by a special ap-| the government money and each plane that crashes paratus attached to the left side ‘of the car and! sts the army lives. Pilots are trained at a stu-|- transformed into gas, which, mixed with air, passes ; pendous cost each and thus the total loss to the on to the motor and is exploded in the cylinders the army every time a plane meets with accident is same as ordinary gas from liquid fuel. {indeed great. High flying and stunt flying should The company’s announcement asserts that light | be discouraged extept where they are part of a pre- motor trucks loaded to capacity can run. sixty miles | scribed course of training. | without refueling, at a cost 80 per cent less than | peo WRI ewe ee ana: I gasoline operated trucks. i He The possibilities of such a vehicle are enormous | Editorial Comment By using wood it will be capable of burning scraps | and ends now completely wasted. The economy of | Th 5 aaa it we | e Kansas Seed Wheat Fund operation is at once apparent and thus it would do; Vicia cll as} The battle of Loos came in September, | i 20 | 1915. { 1 Had America entered the war at the beginning, or} That's the way the | { war department has disclosed in anncuncing that the | From the evidence brought cut at the court-| martial it appears that Captain Randolph was fly- | To the military | man, however, it was not too harsh since it would | ‘ { 14 ‘ 1 much to lower rates, not only for pxssengers, but ; i freight. A cut of 80 per cent in the cost of trans-| It is doubtless surprising to many people to learn | portation is bound to be reflected in reduced rates that a fund of $100,000 is being raised to puncaee | to the traveling and shipping public. ‘seed wheat for distribution in Kansas. During July But it is as a conserver of gasoline that the ve. /and eb sath peews of prey deni poesia hicle will be most appreciated, The use and waste Kee sh ; mat ; rel peated Naim . of gasoline is tremendous and unless developments fae 8 8 ae na pereselphcacsgips ech like this wood-burning automobile are successfully , Scanian sy anue eae cay its watesly: dd brought to completion the world will face-a very se- gbbHtitcloce this. cata saad toreubd>. Nitscaly- hb ‘the squree of inccme on such farms destroyed, but at jthe failure of banks made it impossible to obtain mee ceria of Ea lon rer financial assistance for those whose only asset was Public education in the United States is a local their ability to put in a wheat crop. None of the! main so. Despite the constant drift toward a federal bureau- cracy in this matter the people of the nation as a whole will not favor such a move. They insist that the responsibility for the maintenance and opera- tion of school systems lies with the state, county, township and municipal governments and they are tight in that attitude. seed wheat will be distributed among farmers wh) are able to obtain credit from other sources. The seed wheat fund is nct a matter of charity. Each of the counties to which help is given has raised $2,500 locally as a matter of good faith. The wheat is to be distributed through a committee ,of representative men, who will insure that it goes The federal government is not insensible to PONT le rca tna iaahriblon Seema feeling and Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work jun one-fifth of the 1927 crop in payment for seed. recently revealed this when he stated that while the The contributors to the fund not only expect to have United States Bureau of Education does undertake he original amount refunded, but hope that the the promotion of education throughout the country, yields of wheat will be such as to insure an ade- its mission is nct to operate. the public school sys- quate return upon their investment, tems, but merely to serve as a clearing house for, ‘A similar fund was raised in 1923 to provide seed the dissemination of educational information. apie aan achich, produced the heaviest yields in If this course be followed sincerely all will be well 1996, The seed wheat fund is a simple example and the people will greatly appreciate the work that of the old command to bear each other's burdens, the bureau will be able to accomplish in the co- ]¢ is a means of helping to bring a large number of ordination of the educational facilities and methods distressed farmers back to a sound basis. of the entire country. As a clearing house the, [pn the early history of Kansas an exodus of set- bureau will fill an important position in our educa- ¢lers cecurred when similar conditions prevailed. tional scheme, but if it is to undertake its chosen The wheat fund will prevent such an occurrence work with the idea of some day actually directing this year. It will be the means of adding approxi- sas educational destinies of the nation, then let it mately ore hundred thousand acres to those which ware, . ! vi " The government's education bureau maintains a ne eee Baye, bane will condemn stats of spectalists-who survey all fields of educa- the wheat fund because of the possible addition to tlm’ and on request investigate municipal, county surpluses in 1927, Those whose theory of economics and state systems, making reccmmendations for yests upon the basis that the smallest total crop courses of study and revision of systems, It also brings in the greatest returns to the farmers as u collects and publishes statistics regarding every group will not be found among the list of contribu- feature of education in the United States. Thus it tors, Those who are advancing the fund come from can easily be seen that it is within the power of the bureau to be invaluable to the duly constituted educational authorities in the various sections in a purely advisory capacity. We only must watch that the scope of this bureau does not gradually. en- créach more and more upon the power and discre- tion of our local authorities. Kipling, Man of Sorrow | . “Rudyard Kipling recently gave to the public an- book of stories and poems, “Debits and Cred- ith" Much has been said and printed about barbed be Al this volume which the author evidently in- for America. These shafts concern the world war, and the part in it which America played. That, and the Ameri- can attitude in some of the war's aftermaths. ly a source of income. Members of the board of trade, clearing houses, manufacturers of farm im- plements, wholesale houses, newspapers and indi- viduals make up the list. These individuals and groups acknowledge their dependence upon the pros- | perity of the farmers for their own welfare by rais- iing this fund. Z Good News For Dairy Farmets (St. Paul Dispatch) Senator Lenroot returns to Washington and on Monday gives out the tidings that the Tabor bill, which passed the house at the last session, will be- come a law at the coming short session.. The Tabor bill requires that milk and cream imported from grcups to which the production of wheat is indirect- ‘ Wethere! lar town widow. Dr. Peter Dorn, admiring her, is distressed Judith Martin, tcaching at Pendleton University, friends among the radical set, ii ing Eric Waters, Will ind Eve Gerhart, popu- at her student feiendships, because Dean Tim- othy Brown, his superior on the dixcipline committee, disapproves of them. Myra Aldrich is jealous of Ju- dith, because Eric shows her at- tention, att runs off to the city for end of relaxation. ere she sees the wife of Dean Tim- othy some Brown, escorted by a hand- foung man. Returning to Pendleton, she finds Eric on the same. them train, and the dean sees alight at the station to- wether. Mra. Brown sends for Judith, pacts promises not to speak of her in town and a friend- ship ins between them. The dean, coming home during this conversation, hints that he thinks Judith and Eric went away to- gether. | Judith leaves the house in an- ger. On the way home she is but at then to Myra colator fee doesn’t Jud’ Canada shal! submit to the same test for purity and sanitation that the milk and cream produced by American farmers is now required to undergo.~ It. ~ “Damnation to All Neutrals!” is the title over one story in the book—a story about a villain, obviously American, trying to sell oil to the central powers in the year 1915. - Fj is strange, in a way. Kipling’s first novel first the sale the American, who, when the cream he produced failed to meet requirements, saw it rejected as un- fit for human consumption, to his own heavy loss. rie van’ however, has regarded the measure more ; dairy indystry, i: increase of price in demands no more of the foreigner than it does of bed fe for some time, frowning anxious- Then she began to pick up M Til be accosted ruffian, wi seeing there was no answer. ous breathing came from between the pace lips, and the fumes of alcohol ung heavily about her. Judith Began the laborious ascent. the top of the stairs, the light from above fell on the closed eyelid Myra stirred and clenched one hand over her chest. mured and began to ery he struggle seemed interminab Myra’s room and laid her burden on the bed. She began to pull off he outer clothing, and clutching at her heart. I'm burning. i Judith left her with her head buried e back with her electric per- ing out a cun of steaming black cof- when Myra “Please ‘God, don’t let me die, with this fire in my stomach, What’ Eric do if I die? Oh, I forgot. by “Kitty” threat her dining at a roadhouse with Erie some time before, just before the place was raided. Shea is fright student Judith is awakened by a noise ‘on the porch that night and open- ing the from door, catches Myra in her arms. NOW -GO itened away by two men Lol ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XVIII \ b unconscious. she whispered, but! Only a stertor-/ shifted Myra’s weight and Near; “Fire!” ast Judith staggered into! stopping now an chafe her wrists and temple: sat up, crying “Fire!” again| “Judith, Water!” feebly sobbing. She in a moment. She was pour- began to pray. Eric’ railed forced her to take the cof- care.” Her muttering off in a long wail. fee, supporting her with one hand and holding the cup in the other. Myra looked Judith , smiled the smile and heartedly. t Everybody's laughing at me. T'm going to die.” Judith began running through the er curiously, and ly. Myra caught e to ery broken- “You're laughing ‘ of the University directory, feoking tor the medical division. “What are you doing?” called “You can't send for anpheay, kicked out of school if you do. D'you hear?” The hands. Iv. Myra’s closet. A directory fell from Judith’s She watched the girl on th clothes and hang them in the ti ware of tinted paste- board lay on the floor of the bottom of the heap. It proved to be a tally card for bridge. Om one side was Myra’s name, and on the other, voice answered, “Mistauh ni | wrong. __It was dawn when Myra lay sléep- ing quietly enough to be left alon Judith turned out the electric lights.) In another hour, the Stedway house. hold would be eet Already, spar- 'faws were twitte in the trees near the window pane, Judith drew the blankets: high about her patient's throat, and! opened: the window wige for a few minutes. The fresh Swept through the room, and it geemed to her that Myra” breathed: More softly. When e had lowered the’ sash’ halfway and drawn the blind, she tiptoed out.. A door across the tall After a moment, the face of the elder Miss Reasey -ap- peared in the - erack. “Anythiny wrong? I heard you moving about. “Miss Alrich has been sick,” Ju. dith explained. “But she’s sleeping = I hope nobody will disturb’ er.’ ; In her own room, she made a “Don't Disturb” placard and, going ixto the hall again, hung it on Myra’s door. There was just time for a half-hour nap before she must dress for the day's work. It was a small voice that called to Judith as she wearily climbed the! stairs late that afternoon, She went into Myra’s room, and found the girl 1’ sitting up against the pillows, her face like a mask of tragedy. i) ng for, you, for| far “I had to meet I couldn't come any soon- ww do you feel? Myra covered her face and began to ery hystericall; wish I were de ” she sobbed. er and over. Judith sat down beside —her.; “Hush,” she said. “You don't want the others to know there's anything 1 told them ‘you had a sick headache. Did anybody come in dur- ing the day?” Myra shook her head, “I don’t! tare who comes in. I tell you noth- ing matters from now on.” a ‘EVERCTT, I DROPPED IN To SGe IF } YOU'VE GoT ONS OF THE CATE NOVECS Mov'LL CST ME TAKS, To READ. : At five o'clock, just a few minutes | after the last of the afternoon's nin ‘eullers had taken a reluctant depart- | ure, the Cluny ..limousine rolled ‘noiselessly to a stop at the curb be- ‘fore the Lane home, and Cherry de- .|seended like a proud, -small queen. |The uniformed chauffeur followed her jup the path to the house, his arms piled high with parcels, including gayly colored bandbox from the m: exclusive hat shop in the city. On Cherry's lovely, childish face there was an almost comical dignity |and condescension as she directed ithe chauffeur in disposing of the jtressed to see the small, vivid face cloud over with petulance, the golden eyes fill with tea: e honey?” Faith “Oh, I’m tired opt! at her- tears with tie back of her hand. “Shopping all ufternoon, with | that noisy old man right at my elbow |every minute! Couldn’t get a darn {thing exactly like I wanted it! He's | so scared I'll look young in my trous- |seau things! If he had his way I'd jdress in black trailing down to my | “It seems to me he'd be rather ‘afraid it would cause gossip, his go- ling about with you to shop,” Faith | deprecated. { “Oh, little does he care! He talks | right out loud about our getting mar- | iried! and sometimes I think if he! { counted on baving a date every sin- solitary night ‘between now and Thanksgiving: day, and now I sup- pose every boy that I go with will ditch me because I’m engaged to that silly old fool.” “Cherry, Cherry” Faith seized the girl and held her hands in a crush- ing grip., “It isn't old Mi: that’s the fool. It's you—you! derstand you! Hating him, him, calling him ugly id yet letting him Py, you hundreds of dollars worth of clothes and planning to marry him in No- MUCK STUFF AS jpackages and in dismissing him Doan yea now goiite sieply wreck. |with grand nonchalance. But when| ing your life—w h ct TAS THING CAN jhe had marched away, Faith was dis- | ‘"£ Your be dat fel ee “Oh, don’t start Cherry writhed out of and flung herself upon the pit that again! h’s suddenly a frightened again, a full lower lip caught between her round, pearly teeth, her golden eyes wide with terror. “It's too late, isn’t it, Faith? ! Wonder what May romance,’ I suppose,” Faith’s lip curled in bitter cynicism. Later, when Faith. was dishing up supper in the kitchen, Cherry wan- dered in disconsolate again. “What are you doing tonight, Faith—: thing special?” “Bob's coming ove: called up,, hd George Pruitt y had, a dath yet?” with Bob. “Has Bol ything lawn breeze }, says, ‘al ‘Something fied,” She didn’t mind dic murder him! | Cherry was strangely diffident, crum- —ah—more digni-| bling a thin, three-cornered slice of mimicked bitterly. “I| Faith’s home-made bread between it so much when I was | unheeding fingers. jon from him because 'No,” Faith answered rather short- hi: ih’ gaye mea chance to| ly. “You must see what a position it catch up with my notes. But now—”| puts Bob in, your being engaged to ! “Why, ‘dear, aren't you working|his uncle. I don’t think he'll say 'for him’ any longer?” Faith asked in| anything to me—if he means to at all —until after you're You can imagine how the papers would try to figure out the relationship by marriage, of an uncle and his nephew marry two sisters.” “If you ee Heh Lae helped : an aun of you, wouldn't i . You know what he did? He Cherry smiled cater forlornly. u;teld Mr. Neff, his partner, you know, h, Lord, what a mess! Say, Fait! {that we were engaged, and by Tues-jare you—awfully in love with Bob? her reproach-| day it was all over the office. Then! There was something so desperate ly. “Do you. think 1 could touch; he said it wouldn't he ‘ah dignified’ in the suddenly rigid little figure be- food now? I'm ‘too miserable even|for me to ‘ah, work for him,’ since] fore her that Faith found herself ly- to think about “it.” we were engaged. But he’s going| ing, out of the greatness of her pity. “Nonsense,” said Judith, as right on paying me my salary, for| Maybe that would be a way out. eft the room. ‘She eame back with Pin money, ax he: calls. it. Cherry had always said that she a box of bouilion cubes and Some not| “But you can't eps ? every day andj cared for both Bob Hathaway and water. “We won't do any talking’ day,” Faith was dismayed. “And| Chris Wiley. To marry Chris would till you've drunk this,”’ she ‘said, Dad will find it out somehow. Oh,| be infinitely more tragic than marry- peremptorily. Cherry, you're just getting deeper} ing old-Mr. Cluny, but if Bob still Myra’s jaw set firmly. “I don’t and deeper into this thing! Did you| cared, even a little bit— want anything but water. I’ve know he'd -been interviewed about drunk quarts of it today.” > (his engagement for the Sunday Star? Sie al org Judith, “and comers wel ae, eee ente it ee time you drank it, you got’ sicker, Tan sqciety’ editor led up| “Oh, I was 'e—s: suppose.” {mother today and said MrCluny had| would you sian nonin tok Myra nodded. When Judith prof- confirmed the rumor and they could} Bob away from rou, just for tonight? fered the bouillon she took it meek- get details from her. - 13 have a date wich ster Hart, and “Ugh! "t any taste,” she “My God!” Cherry jumped up and|I know he'd. be willing to change said, ungrateful rbeat her curly head with a ‘clinched! Please, Faith!—I'm nearly desperate Judith grinned. “Just the sam: ., What in the world did she} for-one more good time and after to- i do you good. -Now you rest say morrow’s paper ‘comes out, I—I'll be ile I bring some water. "Gave them the announcement,” | stranded here at home, with no da She brought a basin and towels Faith confessed drearily. “And thete|no work, no nothing but an old m and bathed Myra’s flushed face and were seyen neighbors here, ‘all just | doddering. around Faith?” hands. Then ‘she drought - powder bursting with curiosity. They ate up (To Be Continued.) and rouge from the ee ng 6 Il the raisin cookies and the marble! (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) Faith plans of hap- herry didn’t say eof dad, jand T thought I could get a lot of ‘shopping done. And the old fool |wanted me to lunch with him every |b “I don't ‘think I’m the kind to be wiully in love,’ honey,” Faith man- aged to laugh carelessly. “Why?' it “You shan’t see yourself till fin- cake I'd made for Sund and a shed with you,” she said gaily, and whole loaf of my bread" TOMORROW: Again Myra conjared up a watery .-_: “Now I'm in for it!” Cherry moan-| to sacrifice her-own chance there,” she said, handimg Myra‘ed. “I didn’t want it to get out till piness with Bob Hathaway to sav. a mirror. “You ‘don’t “look @ few days before the wedding. I'd' Cherry. : . 4 lodked at! herself gravely. 0) so when we got to the aaa > ‘held out.-her h to Ju- “You're good, rypgne +e a-hill and the cars stopped, I jumpen | BARBS I haven't any right te touch out ‘and ran ta ‘the car ahead. Two : | vou. Tne: weheinen jot the other. men, who aan have ——_——————_ Judith sat down on the foot of the ny girls sort-a: took me under their By Tom Sime o oi vwing. After while they brought the A ed: "T aeecet yoar Saar ae: Sey) ttle ‘out, and 1 remenboret thee| “Americans should have a kin, Myra.” ric had said earlier in the queen of their own; ‘The other girl nodded. “First of “Don't give any to the girls. It all,” she began, “this is the:first time | dynamite. ever been—-drunk. Maybe you! , “Piwas so mad at him'I took a big! i won't believe that. But it’s true. 1 drink of the stuff. And after that—” quite know how this hap-| She broke off, pressing ‘her hands | against her eye: Judith spoke gently. “Don’t agon- ize, Myra, You've come out of this . “But it wasn’t’ luckily. Nobody knows but me. cried. “I was with) And it will never happen i Psi) Wouse, playing) Myra threw her head “You bridge after dinner, Then a. crowd| ean bet your Hife it never will! Do Sp there! of the boys and their girls got a/ you think I'm so low as ever to —— couple of cars and started for a spin| touch the vile stuff again?” Famous double plays into oblivion: out of town, about seven o'clock, I ‘No,” Judith answered, “of course! Karolyi to Cathcart to Hawley. will you be mi the 3 wus too- late, Bak they, ac friend i ‘ like. Sede id, ‘Spoitsport!” my frien , jo we ? si Sesion miei’ Fa Satay maar pa maemo much. for, me, when lve i we've out, . AS we go to press we can k of only about 80 or 90 that we dl » though they don’t all wear wong or no detective, presi- dent's s $e no president's son, Trumbull, daughter of the Con- necticut gor by right out ie is too tie herself don’t pened.” ‘ ‘You were with %Eric, I think id Judith, quietly. his him at the it down, went ahead and kept still. J Well, we don’t mind the cream, but There was a cute ‘ou do the very word peaches doesn't even down from Chicago, that all the boys were hand-| been a fegular devil to you. If agree with us ve 1 . ing a tine to. Pretty soon, 1 saw| been in your place last ni i A aaa that Erie haye let little fool: Myra die.’ frightened, id “lest you meld die. But ray we not. call x doctor, ‘Let's forget it.| particulars all we?” lyra “shook her head dolefully.| Headlines that tell the storpe “I doubt if I ever cai AMERICA Ii E AMERICA 8 NICE, SAYS EM! | talk about it any mor (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) putting down the But I won' Judith was on her way to the li- brary just fore dinn Wetherel ove dent’s house. = + YES, | THE LATE Novecs, WHEN THEY Do WILSON, < HAVE A NUMBER OF THE TIMG HAS COMS WHEN IT’S WECC To HAVE AN UNDERSTANDING ABOU; THIS BOOK BORROWING Busines; I WANT TO Say L MAVS. POUND THAT! ANY Book A PSESON LENDS ‘Kou, NO MATTER WHAT WEAR IT WAS Pus: CISHED IN, ALWAYS Come A LATE one! AND >. she jed 4 you AND Now THAT od ttle Z T travel'd in Well he waa. pee sD) - jends, eve ie ee Sas = e wee smal or, called £0" hist"on the Pama Fhe| Whit Tove T'bore to then” ™*™ It’ peanen als. she foam ‘and t n| Tis past, the melanc! f {teu you the’ chapter doesn't ‘like it] Nor will I uit thy itd sate much. é; : A second time; for'still I seem | ‘I'm * sorry,” said Jugith, chrtly,| To love thee more and more, jAbat that isn’t, of fe all im- i ; «| portance to m : tay g:|Among thy mountains did I feel ~ he Fp one BS Sea a wns A si dl turn’d her wheel eee Beside an English fire, Thy j wornings show'd thy nights ‘The bowers were Lucy play'ds And thine F rhe Let is the-last exert tel a ~ —W. Wadsworth. Pp with him, “It's . ; plained. pat’ t go.” | S Baek TRA, FNS, ATURE Ore

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