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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER i ( lished 1873) to other climes after the first hurricane, the sec- ond, or the third. When humans pitch their tents, they take root, somehow, and refuse to let go. Time and again Vesuvius spewed her molten lava jof death before Pompeii was buried and her people Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | horribly killed. They must have known that some Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice ®t) day the volcano would get them, but they waited, class mail matter. chanc z Seen tas clans ee iene and Publisher | ok a chance, j The entire world holds inhabited places of men- Dall get vare mites Eayaue = Savane | ace—spots where humans dwell in the shadow of 4 ly by carrier, per year ...... | earthquake, flczd, raging wale, volcano, and death 720 quake, , raging «ale, F § Baily bed aau iat goa, (in Bismarck) jin its myriad shapes. Towns go dewn in ashes, but ‘ (in state “outeide Bismarck).... + 6.00; the people remain. Their hands send new towns Daily mea, eng EAA i DR 6.00! rising phoenix-wise from the ashes of the old. lember Au i Member of The Associated Press It’s just human instinct to cling to the place! F aval titled to humanity calls home, and not even death can seu S| is exclusive! entities instinct! legs woe for republication of all news dispatches | parla ees mi credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-| —. per, and also the local news of spontaneous crete A Way Out published herein. All rights of republication of a | Just a few words about a new novel, written close fee stint herein are also reserved. jto the world we all live in. It is “Yerney’s Justice.” Foreign Representatives i It has been translated frem the Slovenian, in which | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | it is written.by Ivan Cankar, into many languagee. | e280 a 3s CHICAGO Per pine | Yerney was an aged farmhand. He had spent his | Tower Bldg. ND suitrn ioe "| whole life working the estate of his master, which | NEW YORE. BURNS AND fifth Ave, Bldg. |had grown under his hands from a little miserable | farm into a flourishing bit of property. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) When the cld master died Yerney was fired by the = Se ME | young ‘heir, who hated Yerney bzcause of his lack of | Eoonomists, are prick. |ervil m at the animosity abroad! Yerney went ou the world with a hatred for toward Uncle Sam. One of the most penetrating | Weylth and hot with a wanes of vengeance. works on the subject is by Judge Frederick Baus-| “There was no flaw in the logiesthatMlowed over | man, formerly of the supreme court of the state | and over in his mind. The farm was a miserable | of Washington, who lms applied his judicial mind! bit of lund when he began to work on it with the old | te this consolidated animosity against America | master, For forty years he worked the soil, fertil- | for long months. Mots the fields and meadows, built the large white he judge writes, in part- | farmhouse—something of Yerney’s soul remained in ee » by. the| every bit ef wood, in every stone on the place—it ee cruees:cn oe nochinnedtueiehl e a | was part of him and he was part of it—and could British populace formotten Ther as eral, SURE. Sitar, who had done nothing at all, simply st us in every British domain a_ reset Be ‘i hh : Bae gta in some cireles and contemptuously | “*¥> Fam master and you must go?” revealed in others. 1 The tragedy of this book on Jedi Dies ia ae epales iteetf “with whelly | Sitar evho does not know the incomparable, wort! i eter ace cit cee i jeans, | cf # Werker who can toil for another and yet. put/his Nowa Be ‘ serical ea ce "| whole life into it—feel that his work js a part of | oes we are ee ae i him, and he a part of it.” “Across the channel, American travelers in Paris "When our complex system of capital and labor is” were compelled t» get police protection against. adjusted that the worker is enabled to work for the insults of the mobs in July, 192 VstacoearVa was aedid) ola -Veriey, aiiaut teint “The central powers for their part can have no) subject te the ingratitude t» which Yerney fell vie- love for a people who sent armies across the set! tim, perhaps we will hear no more of “industrial | te aid their already numerous enemic ? | wars.” | “At our very doors the eastern Canadi: for us a detestation so intense that only for rea- sons of business do most of them ccnceal a scorn for which we have given them not the slightest Provocation. = “On the south, Mexico, for reasons wholly dif- . ferent of course, is so deeply hateful as to be a *willing nursery of any well arranged movement -against us by powerful enemies.” Well, regardless of what we may or may not; % Pare , i . | fication. oo . Be i tee Four students have been chosen who, because of Heme ale ae we sidhite! nk Datds. sea ws their unusual premise, will be under the restraining! Mrs, Timothy eee eon residents at Paris, sbeu is drudgery of not more than three courses. They will pry sar maton eee one, Gellic,. wutfortunstely sai then be free to pursue individual study, the impli- fon ina Middleburg eee en derision’ ct), Ashaticane, viel cation being that this is the only sure road to intel-|_ “KITTY” SHEA, a sepa can ome ok tine et teetual achievement, and that by such ‘intensive _ Spise the government at Washington.” Europe is indeed flcesded with these’ types of ~ Americans. Thibet, = They giggle and titter and chortle at everything Abraham, starting with fifty righteous men, and; = Americanese, apologizing for the country of their jthen, fearful lest'so many might not be found, birth and growth. {reducing the number to forty-five, then t> thirty, The judge is charitable with his castigation of} and then to twenty, at last persuaded the Almighty ing up their ears in ns have The New Plan at Princeton Princeton has hopes of adverting the | universities. Dr. PETER DORN, fessor, also admires persuade her to intellectual salvation; but the fear that even this» concentration might not result in an adequate prep- ¢ aration for taking part in the “current intellectual Eric is suspected poison liquor, from + lactual barrenness of: such picturesque seelusiveness _ vlogs shep,..and ;as is enjcyed by Mount Athos or the lamaseries of CHAP’ Eric’s gaze falte Th da: _ them. \to promise net to destroy a certain ancient city if! Ju ee pe 4 a eres peradventure even ten such men were found. So, will that you had only one The Coal We Waste! The commercial and economi ~ is due for an awakening. It i = to burn coal for heat alone. | not Mr. Wells, in his :mniscience, spare a great uni- genius of Ameri | vers if even four young men of exceeding high an economic crime In of stirred by her r swered sullenly, ; 8Cl | sands who are not deemed fitted to enjoy such free- Reve, ge = _ The lesson is to come from Europe, where coal is|dom for intensive study, and so are not prepared for her fac % Precious, where it is seldom burned, where coal is| his full intellectual assceiation? At any rate, it is a/Judith?” made to give’ up valuable oils and gases before it| significant recognition of scholarship that Prince-| want zgiid%t need finally goes into the fire as coke. jton is making. = European authorities are. bringing the lesson: a # across to us. They will ccnvene at Pittsburgh soon Meal tomatic at a special coal conference called by the Carnegie} Py = Institute of Technology. The meeting is called be- Editorial Comment E cause the scientists of America are beginning tol * have fears for our future fuel supply. All Clear, for the Seaway { At the present rate of consumption our proven (Minneapctis Journal) if * sands will yield a sufficient supply*of oil for only} And now the “All-American Canal” project, ix more years, some “experts” contend. That is|thrown across the path of the St. Lawrence Seaway | * by New York interests in the desperate hope of laying if nct defeating it. is waved aside by Army. engineers as impracticable. While the text of the report { not public, its pur- port is plain. To transform the New York Barge Canal into a ship canal would involve eccnomic and engineering difficulties so great as to put it definite. ly beyond the range of practicality. “Yes!” cried E Just as one item in the problem is the fact that | have been Shea. nearly a hundred railway and highway bridges that] Judith looked at now span the Barge Canal would have to be raised; if ay ask, is— and rebuilt. The’ resultant changing of grades, tc | "*¢tion with Sher say nothing of the enormoys cost cf the bridge work, would entail staggering expenditures. There is only one way to join the Great Lakes and the ocean, and that is by improving the natural high- way—the St. Lawrence river. Fortunately, that 1s sifmple, practicable, econcmic. The dilatory proposal of Congressman Dempsey, of Lockport, N. Y., that the United States pour fresh and unaccountable millions into the rat-hole wherein the state of New York has poured so many useless and wasted millions, is ncw wiped off the slate. The state cf New York, which through its press and its public men has often admitted the great need for a waterway joining the Great’Lakes and the sea, should now get in behind the St. Lawrence i y else, that blockheadedne ic remarked. “As other person in the ° something to worry about, Prof. Franz Fischer of Germany is responsible for @ method by which coal is reduced to a gaseous form and then liquefied. into various components. | One of these is methanol, a satisfactory substitute! for wood alcohol. Another is synthel, which is equal to a high test gasoline. And recently he has ob- tained a substitute for benzine. General Georges Patart of France has a process ; similar to the Fischer method. A large American chemical company already has obtained rights to the | 2 exclusive use of it here. : Another German scientist coming to the conven- % tion is Dr. Frederick Bergius, inventor of the Ber- 2 in method of producing i] from coal. By this method coal is reduced to a paste and combined with hydrogen at high temperature and high pressure. ~ The resulting fluid hag all the properties of crude 3 petroleum and must be treated in. the same way to * get gasoline and other products of crude oil. All three of these processes merely heat the coai, = get the oils and gases out of it and leave the re-| f% mainder to be burned as fuel. . _One ton of soft coal burned in the household cre- 5 ates an enormous amount of smoke and grime. \ But| But how did he sagped Eric. “fs Judith, ing. that through the wintlo: his eyes. “That's poison deaths, Judith went up her hand on his that’s all,” she sai want you to tell me Re raised his I chose to squeal. with him.” take that coal first and remove fram it 3000 cubic feet, of gases for lighting and other purposes, four ; gallons of light oil, 25 gallons of tar and 12 pounds | ammonia, and you have left a low temperature | project loyally and vigorously. which is mot only clean, but is highly suitable} The empire state, will, like the midwest, like New ‘household heating. England, like mest of the country, profit greatly by discipline board Judith was silent if you can’t, what this other woman’: desperate than mi It looks as if we've been rather foolish with coal) early completion cf the project. There may be some] ticularly in America. : loss cf traffic for the éongested port of New York: | Burke well, it but that will be a relief rather than a disaster. But, ing. meanwhile, half of the great water power to be de- shest anil veloped on the St. Lawrence in the process of build- flesh of|ing seven locks to make its rapids navigable, will | in, you.’ ‘|gome to the American side. Picture the stimulus | swered J risen, the .winds|that great reservoir of cheap up of a hom from a dilem ive’ a men r reason for, ting if you ‘can't bluff him?” Judith. r WHAT HAS GO) " JUDITH MARTIN, youngest mem- fate which so of the Hee a ae ‘ 3 s sie : great Englisn ulty, gets into the bad graces of H. G. Wells has prophesied for the great Englisn TIMOTHY BROWN, because At first it was the four-ccurse plan ghe accepts the attention of ERIC for the junior and serfior years that was to insure; WATERS, rebel senior. with whom Eric is supposed to have had dealings, overhears a conversa- | study the institution is to be saved from the intel- tion between Mrs, Brown and J ith goes to Eric for help. — e NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY; to laugh. him He raised his eyes to “Ww have walk away from you and y: “You can't expect to spanave like a man of stone,” Eric. “First of all,” said Judith, ne alt but 5 ronan. leged to tell her secrets. be H already know about the thing that; around and came toward her. “What| negligee and call up ea is holding over* me.” ric stared. “What on earth?” — | ‘surprise rose in his eyes. been thinking. “Do you remember my say- somebody whiskey from him—or did, That's ai hed. “Well, not exactly | influence. could make it rather hot for him if} perhaps I can bluff him.” care what they do to me, as I have a clear conscience. NE BEFORE | » astronom: Judith ai conciliate y pro- tries the! 5 t . |. MYRA ALDRICH, in lov ith Eri life of the world” has urged a still further intensi-| is feceus Ge sedan ore with Eric, of bootleggering which two stu- ssiping after she h a man compan- hotel. town bootlegger judith blackmails Mrs. XXV ' d under Judith’s | eyes, but he stubbornly kept silence. | Present, ahead of time, stood facing each other in the “THE other ou the idea! val If, you say that v lastic righteousness are found among its thou-| Shea is trying to blackmail you and } means just one, you done, you so bad it Tl have to I su e. a Jealous man, i u the} mess isn’t a man} I'm not privi- But you ‘aid, and nothing id waited know about it? answered was looking w, when we went down the corridor that night?” “That must! We passed him on! tho road just before.’ st what,” was—your con-; Eric spoke easily, without shifting | simple. I. buy jbefore the to h ut | arm. “I'm glad: id softly. “But 1° what to do.” { "ll take! and asked But I fi I'll have a talk “But he knows that if you squeal) on him, you also ruin yourself. i just waiting for an/ The said Eric. “But moment. then? case is T tell you far more ine. don’t par- her is grateful | y carrying i - gee and ran to the fancy 1! “And; wat unfortunate |~ and A Shot wi name of the writer. .It and beautiful things i reconsider your recent your determination to w: and millions. : nity, co) a certain Mr. Al Th blackmail ended ed paragraphs, with horror, snatched 6 palm down, Cluny’s rela stooped so low Sasa shyster Cherry’ ange: good stenographer ai that letter. See how i in tho latest s! | were you looking so doleful about | when I ¢ % Was there bad jnews in that letter She pointed ‘toward the envelope on the table, | “Nothing vi serious,” replied jJudith, “but it js my plans, Be- | cause a small cousin has scarlatina, el ae 8 vor ens ite i i : i i “Oh, Judith, how awful. I'd rath- Vil fix him all fight. I'll fix Shea.”!ep die than stay in this hole, when Judith put her hand on his arm) everybody else is gone. My heav- ain. “Don't do anything foolish.” | ¢ you'll, be alone with the Sted- she suid very gravely, He shrugged. | w or crasyre. helleat, “But how did —hbout | Ettleson 2” and bewilderment Judith made no wry face. “a oh ¢ Myra was thinking. “Gee, I wish Christmas holidays, Ju-'] could take you with me. But Dad i da letter be: a! and Tare going to my grandmothe: Chicago postmark. She tore it open| jn the country and her little hou: she went the stairs, 11 be full of aunts and uncles and ed to the signature. It the aunt with whom she ha A few days later, during the week’ us in iq | Might have blabbed. isn’t a killing matter, not going to. worry about sai d to the idea . Tim just, d ear Judith,” the note began, | pointed for the moment. My Ch: dreadfully sorry to disappoint; mases have been rather black since I know how dreary Christmas} mother and father died. At board a college town—but Junior is) ling school I used to ery all Chri bed with scarlatina, and the house! mas day. That's why I wanted’ to quarantined. His case is not seri- go to Chieago this year. But I'm ous, but the doctor thinks it highly | grown up now, and above such non- inadvisable— sense.” Judith trailed up the stairs. As Myra was. knitting her abe laid her books down on the table | with her chin on ‘her ahd picked up the letter again, Myra! Judith, I hae an idea, bounced into the room. She was! Deltas were wishing they knew some- sumptuous coat of cara-|hody who could stay in the sorority to do, marry the old boy toda: f care.” tween tea: letter to Me Clangt © to Mr, “But I’ letter Sots ate ert, out salutation, other than tl “Mina Seer bases You are you: holds many tore for you, if you will decision to mate with a man who has one foot in the grave. A friend. who must iy. No good come him if you ist in “If you act quickly and with dig- to end you: certain indoubtedly attention.. Have you him of your little romance, cal- | f! inatii \ddei v4 at Darrow, be called ful, inalvanttog bit of there, without a signature. Faith for a long minute at the neatly but her eyes, rigid Id not separate one letter from another after that first reading which had turned her blood col che: at the letter, but Faith Inid upon it. ar it up!” she roused herself er trance of horror. T can’t believe that any of would have is to send you an anonymous, blackmailing: letter.” “Sor lawyer did voice was venomous with ‘A stenographer—a darned that—wrote locked out, le in busine: spondence? And not a single mistake Vl bet: anything that Alice Allbright, went to sec . lawyer yesterday and gave him a free hand in frightening ‘me off.” lawyer-know about Faith's distress were painful see. : “Good Lord, I don't know! These shyster lawyers haye tie-ups with rotten prtiyato detectives, : who root around and find out things never dream of. A dozen. le saw Darrow. Eetlmon imself \» well exactly what the cowards .want me If. they. he ee a they can howl their heads off, f “Don't do that!” Faith: begged,. be saat terror. --; think I. don't dere show the rose of. Alber really ‘happened. You can back me The letter. which Cherry dropped | upon the sewing machine was on maite, unmarked commercial bon per, -and its three paragtaphs had been neatly written, without. typo- graphical error, upon a typewriter. There was no date, no address or lain pa: in, with- je words -old age te | her little sister. abruptly, stared lock. me off c v ‘No, “Let me it!” corre- "a Pm That's rm me, ek 6 this e: whole Nothing mercurial, ‘sé! | sciencelegs little Cherry up on that—you and Bob. Hathaway. Pade intend for a minute to have anything to.do with Ettleson, I an make Ralph believe me. Thy, it will convince him of my innocence if I show hint this letter—somethi: they never dreamed I’d do!—and he'll be all the crasier to proteet me, marry me.” * put her cane h eames, trembli: around her ry, trembling “I believs thats a ie best thi honey- you wom’t call it off. And Cherry, honey, tell him everything else that—that ‘might come up to cause you trouble. About gett foolish little affairs—Chester Hart, Bill Warren, Bob Hathaway, Albert Ettleson, Chris Wiley —” Color flooded Cherry's face. “I mapa! him about Chris, Faith. 1 —Il'd" give myself away sure, if I talked to him about Chris. I—I'm afraid of Chris, Faith. me around his finger. ly erson in the world P’m afraid of. i I don’t marry old Mr. Cluny, Chris will get me. he'll break hii | afrald of and sym| thy in Ys face as she bent to iss the quivering mouth of “Tt do anything I can to help you, Cherry. And I won't nag you any more about Mr. Cluny. Are vou" going to have a big wed- es 8 “I didn't intend to,” Cherry flung back her head and her cyes glittered with od and pride. it I will now! ‘trying to blackmail me! I'l! throw the sweljest wedding this town ever saw! Mr. Cluny’s a member of St. Peter’s—all the swells are Epis. copalians, it seems—and T’ll have a church ceremony, with bridesmaids and flower girls and a reception at tho Randolph Hotel. You'd be maid of ‘honor, Faith, and we'll knock their cyes out!” She was gay skipped like @ lighthesrted chi she ran away to dress for the shop- ping expedition. Beforo dre: to Aunt Hat with Mrs, Lan “Guess I better move my trunk over, if Pve got to be at your beck and call,” Aunt Hattie retorted spir- itedly. “Well, long’s as it’s you, I don't mit bring my sewi dif peat rae ve out want you're goin’ to have for supper, I'll get things started for you.” ' re ‘Th you,’ Aunt Hattte. You el.” Faith's ‘ice was caress- its gratitude. Cherry heard Faith's end of the conversation through her opened bedroom ee “You eertainly » can manage Aunt Hattie,” she laughed. “Oh, by the way, I'm.going to get M a Fectocty gorgeous dress for the ing. she awake now? I want to tell her all about it and cheer her up, the po k old dar- ling. You don’t awfully it me, do you, really doing it largely, for It would kill her if I mar- ing, Fafth telephoned to ask her to stay not surprised to. sce tears blur the golden glory of Cher- odd,,eyes. The sweetest thing Ifish, gay, con- was her love for her mother, —* ed) « aa ip NEA Servis, ) (Copyright, 1 Pry aie etl Faith and Cherry arm. house. during the holidays, just tolten “em,” ts she shouted boisterous- see that the ly, holding it at arm's length. “Myjand didn’t in' dad sent this to me, as a Christmas!to dance on the He thought | play the victrola. to have it for the trip home.” | rather stay there than here? gray anybody would | house PG ante it for any occasion this Stedway dump. replied Judith, | fire places, and nice white tiled bathe, | er, Tom and, w It's # forgeous thing.” |and great easy chairs and a library. | che ginss-panel slipped it on over her negli-| And the servants will cook good to open it, and Di : nirror. “A little} food.” Myra paused, breathless, but h <i Prima donnu-ish for one so)had another idea. “That big living she commented, looking crit-|room with the nd piano is a gor- at her reflection, “but not to] geous place to have dates.” Judith smiled. “Yes,” if there are ites left in town.” ran into her room put on my dress now,” | ‘Can't sneak down wind: lik came again and agaih. what ent di ” e 4 “How do you doi'Mi came esnecially to—” + er the stairs. : to see you. mped up and down’ on the | £00, re twill you "dot? a | Zon'd (Geop “rind, 0 tel will be tickled to death. You can nigh have the chapter president's room- the cutest place. Every president since the house was built has left mething for the room, and it’s got lamps and. pictures. and an’ inlaid Louls Qninze dressing table that gn old man’s daughter bought to splurge over the rest of them.” vk Judith considered.’ “Yes, I think ‘I will, Myra.” Satin turned! “Fine! I'll just sneak down in my ‘Nhe hor to " repeated Judith. “Real- you're getting worse and 1 the time.’ t's lots, of fun, ; a flash 't so much the people around you, though.” She turned back to the glass. “Dad bought ¢t by himself. Mother's in Bermuda. If she'd been there, she'd have picked out a nice ‘lish gray squirrel, for ubout half the fa Judith ing to Judith as it had ches laughed. Myra slum Q sweet content! EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO ; © punishment! ANYBODY HAT BSCIEVES punishment numbers? Work apace, “apace, Honest Tabor bears a + ed spring? Be _ wr Taen that patiently "AISTSR SMITH, HAVE “Cou Ever Hearn AT TRAVEL BROADENS | oe, hs Ore, is killed when with F and open;, Fe plane Seven meinbers oF the. syne were sentenced to a ts ible ag of course I'll +The doorbell rang belo, and My instead, *“*] a can telescope: the moon to- (Te Be Continued) oe The sorority house is net uo invit-|tho kaiser not to return home. By Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden Art thou rich, yet is thy. mind pér- plex'd? si adi Dost thon laugh ‘to see how fools are vex’ Pi To add te golden. numbers golden be apace, apace; lovely face Then hey nopny nonny, hey nonny, ‘Ronny! eh = Swimm'st thou, in wealth, yet sink’st in ¢hi: - sone ‘Have to she" yaid: jobody answered, the ' ring. ‘Judith’ left door. She raf Dorn ‘stood before Martin? 1, 4sed to NHL, there,” ~whooyed Mera, fi et rn. perhaps wheth- ow! ened frem | heavy deserted and dark. —s, Canst drink the waters ‘of the. crisp- den bea é No barges’ Roses, but is a king, a Ensign Hickory Floed, Rerthand: fails to Reich- lea lity in fed- Loren tered law and will be sentenced ‘Saturday. ft BaRBs. | less rage ta sends over a pnt elephant, . Sevaral rs rey be raised in. this country. No, no, Cheste: tt the red cheeks nowaday: come from nding eer the kitebe stove. Headlines you never sce: MY OP- PONENT MAN, SAYS DEFEATED CANDIDATE. — The German royalists have warned the way, the Germans — a blum, oe, don’t they heard from Famous last lines: “How did we spend so ‘ue (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) tA THOUGHT { It ts not al doa ara ad No man in effect doth sccompan; with others but he learneth, ere be is aver some gesture, voice or fashion. —Bacon, e