The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 6, 1926, Page 4

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An Independent Ni THE STATE'S oi.pest NEWSPAPER | (Established 1! Bs Pally the B { ismarck Tribune Nn aged |ing, to keep the’ market from being stuffed, is the | A stained Satecriton Rates Payable in copes, . rT yea pay ty inal per yeu, (in Bixmarek)... . aie nd Publisher :.. boa tee ‘ent’ overproduction is t> take steps next’ spring ward curtailing planting. Country merchants and bankers who supply the growers with credit should help them make this move. | As for this year’s crop, an orderly process of sell- | ;only way to realize anything approac' hing a fair re) turn for the toil Vise! asim During the week that seen | eae “was ever ‘turned out in hls bag e | = {I hare | Cherry wag {n 9 feter of éxcitement | town. Bon't : | { ver hi odignl ing, On|. Pah Efficieney, or Laziness? TN 1 Wednesday "twat huge PP watdrobe Emperor Augustus of Rome was a lazy fellow, say pre 4 those who are excavating in the subterranean cel- | went po ‘ine idential, friendly lars of Rome to restore her to imperial grandeur. | 3 js ie, ito, itcanes ; nao a = ” ith a They have discovered that the emperor, to save ite: this business. idding you! ‘himself trouble in descending from his home on the | . am | luggage could hold th Fok evar. @ gh wateat Nites eageet Palatine to the temple of Vesta in the Forum, where | f «| thi jerry. was accumulating, i ber of The Assoc! sociated 4 Press | re across in all-my #3 The ‘Abenctate Press is exclusively entitled. to/ his duties as Pontiff took him, had a new temple) 4 Ba TI be ola Be Gp seam: |-prof alee and 1 know m use for republication of all dited Ran 4 atches | built adjoining his home on the Palatine. (she was“ Benise, Modiste “the business Berns to it or not gether taneous origin | Washington, our own capital city, is discussing at ’ ite and also the local news spontaneous ju Fl) take ‘you: in -hand after i Pobishea herein. All rights of Pepublieation of allj jnew group plan for housing offices. They discuss | Leas ei sister's mn rte a. Vin ten come other matter herein are Fese j enclosing the white house with shadowing ranks of i | ij ponied ang with me. i: oa ig is “woman—best : renin hattven { skyscrapers, tearing down homes of sacred tradition | P which billewed and travbed ‘lin the trade ene fight a an G. KOGAN PAYNE COMPANY jto make way for this new efficiency. a Bide with exotie silks, 5 ed all I can face you, TU take you sf OR. Baio int rtners! 1 get the = ADET DETROIT | “The president should be near his workers,” they | me Denise,” ‘den? contneas tracts, and ‘wel hit on Sate fair on reage Bldg. ; that her real | c occasionally. They went bani holders took them over. But they agrt on elie ===Nedw Loree pro} bund railroad ali ge They change -gie-and bury it.” lag. PAYNE, BURNS AND ES) ORK ‘At least it's an original idea. tetting a railroad die alwa: -dies, the communities’ it serves must die with it. 3 railroad’s built. Sas. dependent on it for thei Towns ing up wlongside MITH i Fifth Ave. Bldg. ; = (Official City, State and Couxty Newspaper) — = Letting Sick. Railroads Die The suggestion by L. railroad men in the co any on’t pay be simply permii ther unprofitable business, = Commerce Commission some' == Railroads, hitherto, have Wing staked their all on the railroad, they abeo-| dutely cculdn’t afford to s it perish. “Flow about such communities?” Loree was asked, w position, munities.” It would have cold-blooded. However, Loree have to depend on auto bus L, F. Loree has been syHe didn’t have t> answer. “If those communit their railroads, let them die, too. been a logical attitude, though, did, answer. He ould have taken | es can't support | Railroads can’t be | | supported, at a loss, for the benefit of a few com- ty boiled, but wasn’t this a constructive hint? Isn't | it possible that, where a railroad has ceased to yield | an” is involved here. Woman of yesteryear alwayalaccusation of DEAN TIMOTHY }was no response. “Whe bolt on the! rooms, , but.not a .key was to be| A Welcoine ” dtotrairiess. | 4 say. | I Vg ' to Faith « ‘on Friday basis. . |name was Nora, Dennis, spent niost omaite flushed. oy pod oe bs e | fg ee manlesringy er Fag a ‘looked searchii into the warm, is paling jer | glass, advatelog the he effect. of her mer: | bree Det face of Son “sper inet President Coolidge is not lazy, we know, but it’s conceivable that some of those who want to be close ‘to him are. In other words, is this 20th century “efficiency” - | re bat. she mao-| Faith’s. unwa' D F é a jh it : \- { that would destroy Washington’s beauty the same! 2 = a I “ert to “entgn vr ly GE sts ra it fed, one he biggest | ! old lethargy of the Emperor Augustus, under an-! > ‘vise the construetion of hal eyes glistened . with. . Loree, one of the bigt Liles saatie®? | a azingly becoming. gowns and ‘a| “I can’t keep f1 that rail lines which | ther 1 F | gteat stack of chiffon, faoreette and | flowers when T plait as for. has given the Interstate The Royal Pay Envelope — : embroidery. Slways looked 0. levely in thet pale, thing to think about. “We are not rich,” says Queen Marie, speaking ; \ N | a ' shop of your basta ‘ereamery. yellow’and green, that it been regarded as im-; of the Rumanian royal family. i : AS ‘ jas she care ally” pet att ners ag Sac e e each thing in the +e one control to anothes Her husband, Ferdinand, draws a pay check of a) ; \\ |(Peench: keuts below. -Aue:' nartow| U ae ot krupt and the bond- } mere £160,000, speaking the American money ‘an-j 2 i atrape of filmy white chiffon “com- nat rents be ‘They were consolidated. | guage, | : . “No, I prefer to take entire charge that willsh eae Ribena | ‘ There is an account for traveling expenses, . and | : : of o trousseau or a debutante's com: : Sy ‘adie ty thes “Don't try to keep a mori-) an allowance from. the state for the queen ‘and La . : ny Pret er ecbierienie ‘vith saline objections, Let it child. This amount is not named. ‘ : . y . hax “No overhead, you see. | dreantii wistfully, on the “Water When daughter Marie married the king of Serbi i es , Cae ty gal eciregrae. Boas genre “ Lily” naaligec. j \e: ‘The trauble with | she was given a check for about $80,000. q ] os “ . will make “woman. ashathed to! said’ warningly, in-a, ng voice, as the has been that, if it! This may not strike John Smith of ‘Market peel fae q i ‘ verene _ than | “§ rent i front door opened a and closed sharply. as a moving tale. No tears of pity may, course down | -_ i f | too,-in ‘the best loentiens. ‘This way, ae Hierohhobel rane oe s, his furrcwed cheeks. : ; . « I have absolutely no expense. I nise” put on her airs and her secent ‘xo bankrupt to save my \as Cherry flung open the “dot - {when the ‘trousweau ‘is finished, I! he: bedropm “ or iene most of my earnings clear. 1) “I can't: be: bothered right now!” sun Dar fors ; nat abe. aS laining: room. | can go to Eurone-if.1 want te; or run | Cherry's eyes were wide, that blaz- | She turned out lights behind her ax|down to. my | father’s Ni yellow that Faith knew she went, and switched them on| month. And. believe me; ii |. ¢ ran to Faith, breathless- ahead. . There .was -no, one in the | away.: The ‘thousand -P'li. make -here and. flung two letters upon ‘her But even'so, when one considers the fairy tales i about kingly exchequers, and when one considers | - incomes of crdinary families and dowries of blue- | ‘blooded American daughters, the queen may be} right—they’re not so rich. ROO ALN | Tower rooms, at any, rate: | will keép me for three or foup'months |siater’s lap. “Look! ‘Do you see what | e took a slightly firmer grasp rant to I wee, T going crasy? Look: Tough Days | a8 on her weapon as she mounted the | “Thousand?” Faith gasped. “A| a: thatc-and that - 4 Whether a certain gentleman “stole” the affec- | = ticns of another man’s wife, or whether the wife) WHAT HAS G ‘ stairs. The heenty ire doors still stood | thousand. dollars ; ‘or’ four weeks’; Every vestige of color faded from he | Opens On, vistas pf untidiness in half ok Faith’s cheeks and ties ‘as her star- She went out to the head of the | shadow.’ Judith’. explored them all, ap ric ing, horrified ayes took in the thing E BEFORE | ‘i stairs to listen, The noise grew! peering into closets and under beds. | daine Denise’ patted her. tsarcel with | tha ~~ hind seen. “pave” ; rave” those affections freely, is the nice question) 4, rivals for the favor of JUDITH | still louder, She switched on th . 6 locked the door. to the. attic) a den sgee it —_ “Ofcourse your | under discussion in a midwestern court. MARTIN, young college teacher, ERIC | lights stairs, and went Bet to her room. a pay Mrs, Hogan's pile 8 (ce pag 1080, NEA Sevview Tne.) He said, “They!!| The husband seeks $60,000 alienation-of-affections WATERS, rebel senior, and DR. PE- It was chill and damp.” The fire | extra, but ‘they amount to/only seven | 7 h for TER DORN, astronomy professor, | | By the door leading to the cellar! nad given up entirely, and there was|dollats a day’ But 4.11, ‘2. say it, and motor trucks.” | money. The defendant says the suit is unjust, for head the respective factions of radi- | steps 5! bell button. She! no more wood in the basket. Judith | when seatvs Halston ‘nore. a Sher-| possib! icized as pre hard-, he did not “steal.” a * tives in the college ial r . ‘ional i xamined- the ,door of the room.| ry Will pore the swank write Much of teday’s prattle about “the modern wom- |“; mintt:thelihe sersanta’ reo ‘ \aavanan ee Wer Pegi i gr a i ” WN, that Eric dealt in poipon lis}door was not in place... | 5 a profit, the transportation system is wrong in that had her affecticns “stolen” from ‘Her, for she was Bor fecen Wht we. te eto have She pushed ey Bere: tate [feet Saale te. obi ast ihafping eo particular Iscality, and a new one ought to be| not deemed sufficient of a personality to voluntarily ‘and rang again. There. was still no} she carried the small straight desk in Sounds’ straek adopted? and of her own volition “give” affection which the | ae ALDRICH is fond of J e Judith’ stood par-| “bait, fo the door and propped it | were neither of the. wind By-Tom Sime, 3 When there was no alternative to railronds, rail- law said belonged to her husband by rights of prop-\"“ixirrys SHEA, ‘town hootleggers| alyze« dgatery thes door |eeetsite sateen ME vad!" | wendae Cations eee eedeges veers see ete a, Pearetie: we ue roads it hnd to be. Today there is an alternative.| erty ownership, --~ ~~~ tig ying to blackmail Mes. Timothy |The cinpty | house seemed full of a | She way startied by the Finging of 3 eee jonscthe soneretel Pye, 4 gh wing scovers vat e 1001 ~ Is it sat cssible ese vee ayia at ee country ra vantercdapirah the “gue oarbiag * Brent met a man fiend on Weckcend trip sven i ‘ onan ee cape ele, Rie she sank | ieee ef e ‘porch beneatl her win aes “ sad agi sei « “t too slow in turning ii ready it's recognized courts usbai ing te the city, ‘wi ui e dean's wesping in the rev withou: moving. i i chenk weddings Ww! Daeg Ipdare. ds her, head. up,,dudith |" The shrill. bed tore": the sit Pr . . hi that the railrogds are at an advantage in Rises so chaotic, with wofpen's rise!’ ee } Judith also knows, Mra. Brown's, |,one! Vi nto the Kitehen, and! agai and Tin Aa he ence ‘ agic night: ites Shoe Hi Kis’ jege chenee?” classes of hauls, and the motor in others. jay — secret, and has befriended The half light from. motionless. At last it stopped, only There is a shet in the da there not be more classes of haul in which. the Moto.’ —_ — ne , She asks Eric to keep Shea from [the hall. shone on the back door, to start up‘in‘a few momenta, with read it In thd ness ‘chapter. The " tivat hun ‘sida. are: the ag: i % . hounding Mrs. Brown, standing je open, with a great! increased violence. peitioetnaitaon, 3 ae hardest- Musee is at an advantage than the public has yet come Editorial Comment Judith agrees to stay in Myra’s}rush of wind sweeping through the! At last’ Judith rose unatendit and *— THOUGHT SE aaa ™ . te.eealize? : house to supervise the :Foom. ed the room. ~Sh pushed th I ar, a hen’ the stage h and the carrier's; Wie daring the Chelamas holic|, duaith made for the atring thatichair’ aside and. apened: ther mae A THOUGHT | AceLAI sie eoebe as ee een ene nen eee - i A | On the Road to Bighty. 7 tives to visit. |contralled the electric ent. The| When she took down the’, receiver PE ens: an SUPERIOR TO van was crowded out by the railroads. Are the rail- , , On e gdta ‘to }door swung to behind he there was no answer:.' She-tattled the | réads, in turn, to be crowded out in many places? | (Omaha World Herald) the movies and. returns, to find the kite ca wast darkness, 5 hook and a peevish voice . ‘replied, Loree at least in part implies it. The Interstate! Prof. Irving Fisher predicts’ that bythe ond of house dark and terhidding. wile bent att apres ‘ eh no one 2a ni yaee, tine: new!) Commerce Commission’s problem is the regulation’ the century America will have Jhecathe a-nation of Now GO LON WOT Tie STORY |, er ack. 2 e.| | ,,'But the. phone! been ringing ‘for, abe, J iiina® ENS ey ao “wit *, ‘ Cc 7 fan st open, ere Was a of automotive transportation. cctogenarians. There will be young folks too-at) 7, ctiune stockatark among little, stool nearby, and. thia-she| “Phe "party that called ‘you 3 a net eget mia After ot, shed gsc plod ured SESS Se ‘that time, we surmise, but we Deron all phates its bare trees. Judith turned, und! placed ‘against, the door. | The ‘cord | hung pr replied the voice. : i I pleaser has hppa pps ° Mars and Radio come so disgustingly healthy andthe, medics lool a nek pwn roa The little sean enn bed a= ae ees ae Judith went ‘back to her room oi " . Beat? to mail plotter in ad j *Present interest in the planct Mars, due to its: have developed such miraculous efficieney that we een earn ilies Baow's -Onpe mmcdudithy wnanalat che onan tee hee are ae ee eri , ne at Warren, 3%. f approach to the earth, brings to the surface again ‘shall be germ-proof.’’ The result willbe an un- | When she reached the lamp post demcoue slasined, it Thee she shot| small- table’ near.the bed,’ and now’, ‘we we TE gt tea pees a: amt 1 "Jost ; all sorts of vague theories and illusions about the {usual percentage of old folks hanging around wait: (on og etnas, abe. oats. + het ere coal tae nas No Sp itso ee ; . eye rt radio might in our attempts to communi-'ing for their arteries to harden before booking 4 stiff breeze rushing up,the hil! be- lay a pile of furry little rabbit pelts:|, She was.» 4 “¥ pal ight play P ' NF Ups ps ‘as shivering’ with cold, and | cate with the Martians. ipassage to the new Jerusalem. bindcher cought. Sune e eine ead Rhea sien: as peanped | dgalate tho. bes Bad onlysie Blankets, une wale vik send: A igs ‘1 js ji ry , and i If those ideas ever ring truc, smash goes one of | Still germs aren’t the only thine which make grated the bare branches dfthe trees. The. pantry, oor stood halt open, Prana dbeiate rete Beat witatton jp dail. i a the finest pet theories ab:ut radio. life hazardous—and interesting. fe may sterilize | against one another harsh|: ith a sudden gesture, she piel of the wind became a pgrvadin; a ae | ‘ be | i ie| It row Ider te by wa the gun sind cautiously pushed | St | Ethereal minstrel? pilgrim of the ' +. That's the famous Heaviside layer theory, evolved eociety and fumigate it and put it on a scientific lanier Ee fer Sry enti door thether nasa on app ing Beh ig (her eller cok rl | ‘NEWS, oo [ee sity! by the late Prof. Heaviside of England. On it is!diet and give it setting up exercises every morn- | {against the wind yan went up the iN: px it oThe closet mae roe risa ee ey ya aig ashing yr sooge Beavis the earth where : fi Pai : it walk. the and she laughtd sterieal litt! fi | ‘ayne B; Wheeler, on, pees one entice beliet i Le how sarc wae Fe a co plenty of onpersiaity, to play Pregl ‘¢ in bed, Mor the laugh at sight of he aracit in’a: Halt a It none ni wae at ber says 2 lection shows that. pai Or, while the wings aspire, are heart i ransmit and received, and our sclution ie y ‘3 s vi eas dark as, mirror on t val, of the ‘wind arate wy Fa Ke ‘could wet stand in question why these radio signals don’t fly directly; The octogenarian cf the coming paras must | ths other panes. Then, holding the gun before her,| heat-the house” iat A Lain Bot -wite ey nest upon the dewy . ‘ . hes th let of t ii y| , Thro the gla8s sidelight of the " Iudith t through the hall into| and feel its maaree, ‘she lay ~ + tier grou! et aoe ‘ is ae an gaunt ‘ 1 Pgparbancts penpeey eel Ju ith could see that the great the livi room and thence to the/ in bed. Longworth Clacinnats prota which thou canst ‘drop into HM E leaviside theory presupposes the existence, hooch, of grade eressing, of auton! it and | hall was in pite! # I J . i __. of a mysterious layer, perhaps magnetic, above our; run speeders, of footpads and of government epegeer Uy he a Rees fy of roe eo. ota acm Kent i ne compere, ca atmosphere, about 100 miles up, which deflects the | ‘sleuths who shcot first and investigate after, The|moment she was inside the say : # radio waves hurled from our broadcast and other| process of getting to be 80 years old may be more] reaching for the electric | switch. ingacen, Marie, len sie Napecarer last’ point: “of diton: and be- er nearest. : Wouest ones. i: ae in this layer, so as to let, her into space, cannot | ascertained. But even suppesing a leak—-well,: it takes a powerful receiver to tune in a radio sig- nal from a station 3,000 miles away. * Mars is distant some 42,000,000 miles. when it’: radio staticns and returns them to the earth, where scientifically regulated in the future, but it is bound thay may be received. Stealing From Hotels Hotels purposely buy homely pictures, we are) told, in an attempt to cut the high cost of stealing. ically everything at all portable disappears , from our nation’s hotels, and the only reascn the pickares stay on the wall is because they’re so ugly ly wants them. Hotel proprietors say that all honest human beings are paying from a quarter to a dollar more a! day cn hotel bills to make up for theft by the dis- in of. light brought back her c and Major Stanley, W: Mount, daiing. warblerbidhat 1 love- still to be an exciting one. | eFadith shut the door and bolted it. AN, GVERSTT; HAve ride on same train, bu th eos ae of glitiak, Toe Ape the bosomi-of the Yet might’st ‘them seem, proud privi- to ‘sing | She glanced around the living’ room before she went upstairs, and. saw iho Sor ANGTHOR attle, ‘ything as she had fc ~ Make It a Success ev switched on the light in the,apper mo sake 2 is, reales Ali independent 68 the leafy: Spring. (St. Paul Daily News) — hall from the foot of the stairs. At Philadelphia the American Legion voted to| The house was very cold, and J CHRONIC, : sicherias anges, 3 ‘ [baud its 1927 convention in Paris. ditt ae taran sree rolls r = "smo re” : Californin. in be: id.) Leave to ti ightingsle” her’ pbady Some of the Legionnaires obviously had not for-| make a fire. But she thought better e ‘abbas: a ee a xt ie. Jot it and went upstairs. Thi = 3 E s nator pe Gras seine exclusion of, jgeiten the. entl sigishiga demee tration ai E anes enough kindling im the basket-by her! foe 5 : Sn. Mme, Kellamtay us Antalerable and ‘tlooe, lan summer an Pugin Pa in ” pap the wis-| tirepince to make a small blaze, and 7 . * unjustifiable. H of oe tat with instinct more ‘ae lom of making the pi image at is’ time. 3 it. It vine; But they were snowed under.’ The boys wanted) jor ind feebio flemes. eer P ei os bs wise who par, but to.go and France wants them to come, as evidenced| Judith heard ¢ shutter or door ‘ > y $ Tree vider. eto the 0 Kindred points of Benen by her sending two official ‘welcomers all the way j banging somewhere ‘in the house an reps fi : a went oat de the uj paper hall to 1; to the Sesqui city to say so. ten. From her poi by the stair So there’ll be two American Légion” conventions ; rail, she could look down into the next year instead cf the usual one. The first, in had etic, oe oe ace Paris, the advocate-general says, will be unconsti- ¢ The Dancin onased aot ahs re: tutional, therefore a second will be held in New| ‘urnee to ner Oy ng fire enn’: " ki ith it, the teleph: York to validate the decisions taken overseas. * Bell Pa otha violence “that rue wpe No sooner. had this interesting and momentous sees in At iy of ppl agit house. |" ‘decision been announced thar the Lincolnesque won eetande ‘ber. extension srigpone figure of Jchn R. McQuigg, national commander, | Dean Baers deep contralto voice took the floor to utter a timely warning: angpares ont Steen i bout, e “By your ‘affirmative vote,” he said, solemnly! said the “enn, Hind wanted ote |weighing every word, “you have committed the |sure you reached home safely. It's Legion to one cf the most. spectacular, one of the, (gpd Muace re wicn ey ba most beneficial events in history. It now behooves | rows. eunreed, in our faces all the ¢. us to make it a success, I hated to see you start off up: “Your vote is not thé end-of your endeavor. It is | that road nlone, ie I didn’t know cnly the beginning. beds a do. If I had missed that be . ance to be towed, we might ‘I want to impress. upon you the magnitude of | sult Pg sittin: in the’ roa the undertaking. and the: absolute necessity of the, ,,/Never,, mind about best kind of co-operation ion the part of every mem- au “conversation eheered her, ber of the American Legion. In no other way can ‘that she humned’ a namelee ‘|it suceeed and it must-be @ success or it.will be ® She slipped Into a woolly rabe ord tremendous: detriment. to.'the Legion ‘and to every tat dawn before the tiny tiro, with a one connected: with it. jew maganine in her hand,

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