The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 12, 1926, Page 10

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' PAGE TEN The Bismarck. Tribune An Independent N t Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) the Bismarck Tribune Company, ., and entered at the postoffice st as second class mail matter. Mann..........President aud Publishet Published ‘Bismarck, N. Rismarck George D. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .... Daily by mai’, per year, Daily by mail, per year, {in stato outside Bi 1, outside of North Dal Audit: Bareau of Circulation a Member of The Associated Preas — the Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all mows dispa credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa ger, and ulso the local news of spontancous origin published herein, All rights of republication of a! other matter herein are also reserved. 720 . 6.00 Daily by mai 6.00 Mem Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPA CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE, B NEW YORK N cresge Bldg. URNS AND SMITH : Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official tate and County Newspaper) e Honor to Walter Camp We are in an age which tlorifies physical perfec tion s demand of the age is the recen Valter Camp, football coach rot the All-America team idea, and guthor ¢¢ “The Daily Dozen” ises, which probably have of persons from early gra’ ying Dartmouth in the Harvard half was over. A bugler took arapet at the shorseshoe end of houctted there against ng stood at at fn line with t honor given kent thousands Harvard was p stadium. The firs his -stand on the pi the stadium. He blew tar the oky. Fifty-three thou tention, silent and grave. When the last clear notes of the bugle had died, th: fluz which had been at half mast was raised. ant tae two college bands played “America” while the crowd and pe America glorify her prophets of health port, and rightly sv. Thus do and health-¢ Yords Grow Big just released, the Liberal party, a ne’ hook i. It i spe ct the by his w c gnother “now- ‘lic, hackbiti Zot the gr made ment.” to Asquith laid diary. in a scholarly manner, merely tells what cn going on in parliament for the last half century. One ch cially ix “Political Catehwords” is espe- The earl comments on his own became poli pter Snot the only nation whieh rea meaning into words of little consequener wher uttered by big men! ing Wealth Wisely uttentisn was turned upon Ponca City, Okie... the ether day, when one of its oil millionaires, Lew Wentz, loaned a million dollars to the cotton farmers of Oklahoma, without interest. The cotton farmers of the west and south have been hard hit by the reeent market slump. Wentz adyanced a plan to the relief commission to with- held {00,000 bales from th ‘ket until conditions for 27) favo: Without the million the plan he ief commission wouldn't work Th liona’ re that Wentz is a mil- » use his money. Recently » gave $50,000 cach to the Oklahoma Agricultw se and the University of Oklahoma to be us d for poor students. Wentz has been financing aid fur paying for clinics. Last summer the children of Ponca City a new swimming Every poor chiki gets assortment of mas gifts from him. Each inmate of the county farm gets a gold piece. The Indian children get Christmas trees. These are but 2 few of his bencfactions, are enough to indicate that Wentz's te be in geod hand: But they millions seem University Euecation ‘Ye have passed from the age of general cultural education to an age of specialized education and now We seem to be retracing our steps. It is high tim Certainly there has been no more discouraging de- velcpment in our progressing civilization than the over-specialization considered so necessary. Now educators are approaching the task of mak- ity. university graduates something more than spe- lists in cireumseribed ficlds, or storehouses of| purposeless learning. It wij} mean an ertirely new. scheme of education, Probably a course cf five or six yeats, tes, Cer. tuinly the first two years or three years of college life should be devoted to the, conquest of a cultural background and the development of a general in- tellevtual technique. years should be devoted ts cequiring a bread cultural background. Let th: later years take case cf the intensive specialization, Certiinly some radical new approach is necessary, ah cpnroach that may mean,the complete scrapping of che present curriculum. And it will not be easy to find the solution. Theory will not help much. It will be necessary to; vpvert to the time-honored trial and error method, M1 sehemes will have to be tried before cne is fiutd that will have the desired regylt. "Perhaps the true solution will By 40 givy a.deynee far the’ tio ur. three Years of ential ork, ge stically dropping from college a great bulk students whe are there-because their parents sent fe the thing to do. These men have ng yin learning anything. They clutter up 3 general cultural work would end | the specialized courses open for mr onrnest . seekers after lxnowledge who wish to prepare themsc! jfor their chosen:fields, t We Pay For Style France has for many. years, for many, many years,| becn the complete arbiter cf women’s, styles the world over, No style has been’ cons'd:ted ‘authentic unless it bore the Paris label. Hats, gowns, even underwear, has had ta come from the magical ‘Franc: to be iraly chic. The. smartness of the | French women has been traditional—until now, wien | France finds that her native women can no longer lafford to pay the prices fer. French clothing that ‘foreign women can pay <™l thus the French women tre becoming progressively dowdier, ‘This, of course, could not be borne by the horrified \ French people, Something must be done. All the jbre in the republic were concentrated and+then- vcila, the thing was donc. The scheme is vel imple and ccnsists in the designing of clothing ex- vely for French women that shall be at once most chic and the most inexpensive. The shops 1 still sell French styles~-for Americans, and rench styles—for Parisians. The American woman 1! pay 5,000 francs for a gown and, the Parisian, ”) francs. Both will be chic, both will be happy— rd the ndble eminence of France as the dictator of on will be secure. How easily these major pivvlems of cur civiliza- tien do work themselves out when great minds are concentrated upon the : Get an Early Start And now, folks, that great, big, lovely day called ; | Hlection Day is all over, and all cf us whe didn't! | vote soon can begin talking about a new set of pub-| hic and “wonder what in the world our | country’s coming to, anyway.” | Editorial Comment More Than an Entertainer (New York Times) ~ Regrets at the death of Houdini would not be $0 | deep as they arc had he been only a man who by his tricks and mystifications and astonishing feats furn- ished clean entertainment to millions of people. He was much more tl that, as the public has been ! slowly finding out. He was, for one thing, an eager and profound stu- dent of morbid psychology. The literature of im- jposture was familinr to him, In recent years he! took an active and useful part in detecting and cx- | posing fraudulent performer: who professed to} preduce spiritualis phenomen: ‘That. there is mental borderland where strange psychic suscep- tibilities manifest {hemsel tu climinate conscious fraud Houdini cid rot dony, But he was unsparing and highly ful in challenging a.) kinds of false pketense in this sphere. Far beyond the arts of the prestidigitator, whicn so greatly aided Houdini in running down men who made a claim to supernatural powers, did his in- terests extend. He was a man of wi reading, & i i | collector both of books and of art. It was doubtless | this broad cultivation of the man, in all his varied faculties, that made him so accomplished and virtu- ally unrivaled in his specialty. | { i | ' | | \ | { | JupiTHt Pendieton hontility BROWN, by choosing friends among the students, such as ERIC WATERS, ronomy i MYRA ALDRICH, a student, is in love with Eric, and jealous of Judith.! Judith befriends Dean Brown's | wifes <r costo g her nhappy story. ic is sust of selling poison liquor, and Judith openly defend: im. “KITTY” SHEA, town bootlegger, tries to blackmail Mrs. Brown with a story. of her week-end trip to meet her lover.. Judith asks tric to silence i The Distribution of Wealth (St. Paul Dispatch) Seventy-five persens in the United States re- perted incomes in 1924 in excess of $1,000,000, while three reported incomes. of more than $5,090,000. An income in excess of $1,000,000 is grist for the soap- box orator, & ive such incomes are enough to sink the Uni States to the lowest Communist hell. Standing by themselves they are impressive; but taken in relation to the total incomes reported they do not loom so large. The total net income reported by these 75 individuals was $165,974,175. The total number of individualy making income tax returns in 1924 was 7,869,788 andthe total. net in- come reported amowittel to $25,656,163,454. Ap- proximately 8: those filing returns re- ceived net ince mer between $1,000 and $5,000. Will Durant, ¥ has lost much of his faith in democracy, writes in another connection that the eco- nomic equality which featured the early history ot this country has so far disappeared that today “the gop between the most fortunate and the least for- }tunate in America is greater than at any time since th of plutocratie Reme.” The gap between an inconic of less than, $1,000 and one of moze than $5,000,000 is indeed considerable; but at no. period {n its history could plutecatic Kome show so large a percentage of its population relatively sc well off as 7,370,000 income taxpayers in this country. We have not succeded in making: all men rich or -in effecting a perfect equalization of. wealth. What we have succeeded in doing is diffusing a comfort- able, living more widely among all classes of the population than has been done in any cther country of considerable size at any time in history. ; per « i = a. } The Case of Aimee (Duluth Herald) The Ls Angeles judge befure whom’ Aime! f Semple MeFhersou, highly successful cvangplist, has} o; had her preliminary hearing ‘decides that there isa strong cnough syspicion of-her,-guilt to’ ‘warrant binding her. over for trial ona charge of criminal ecnspiracy. ae ST fo ‘ | Last May the evange! profitable temple hy } i i disappeared. Some time. later she showed’ up near, the Mexican boundary with a story of having beon kidnaped in a Mexican cabin, of having escaped, and 'of having wandered far over the desert before reach- ing civilization. A local, law officer reported that her shoes showed no sign of a long walk, and sc far thé cabin in which, she was imprisoned has not been t, who had built up a rich}; Back in Los Angeles, where she had hot partisans 1 as stron; gnemies, controversy was furious. The upshct of it was that it was charged that the kidnaping story was a fake, and that Mrs. McPher- son had spent ten days. in a cottage at Carmel with Kenneth -G. Ormiston, her radio operator, who is now a fugitive. That is the story which the Los Angeles judge has been hearing, and having heard it he bound the accused over, holding that there is “suf- ficient cause” for doing that. e ~ Mrs. reon is either a saint who is being bit- terly anid venomously, petsecuted, or a charlatan who ought to be exposed, and suitably punished. No teom for,a middle groynd seeme visible. It is not necessary to decide here which theory is correct. But, it seems very.p: h to be as for- mal ‘rial in which it be possible to demon- | sttnte which theory te right. é a a. i 7 6 TAG WO Seas Qe magnetiem and eloquence, |: Shea, he promises to do so. Judith ‘spends the Christmas holi- days at Myra’s sorority house, and o1 Christmas Eve, when she is alone in the house, Shea tries to force entrance. ith shoots in the ait caring him away. in Brown summons Judith a few days later and tells her she mui jn his reform campaign by from ic where “Kitty” Shea ix. Jedith enters her classroom, and heats the students say that some one has been found dead in a car, “all smashed up.” NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXII i in her ty grow fainter and fi “What is it?” sh Tl enCOUrag: They all Judith could understand “Hush,” said the sj randiy, to the others. a Martin, a man y gasped Judith, “Who much. | Just a low Why, Miss Martin, are you going faint?” The elder Miss Rease: dith and patted her with little flutters shoulders. Judith of course I’m not i ie spectacled youth was xnsious to go on with the story. “But pe haps you'd rather not hear any morc, about it,” he suid to Judith, She summoned a smile. ‘es, tell me. ! the boy, Well,” 5: “jt seems thut Dy, Hillyer examined the body! und gold he'd been dead for day: Probably sitice Christmas, “hey haven’t learned what killed) him, but, his eur was all smashed up! ‘ae ofthim. e whisky containers were hrewn high and wide, all over the Sérroundin country, But tl wasn’t much whisky smell left, re hi the time the botties| m to Middle-| barg to interpolated the, wise youth again, “Wasn't it just a motor accident?", asked Judith. i head. tell till after the inquest, toi They think maybe he died before car, fell. st, what Doc, sald, though he hadn’t much chance, for a post mortem.” i Judith shuddered lightly and) picked up her toxtbook. “Please Leer the f iss! eABEY,. “Can't! she said. er} thoughts wander for some time, till) at last Missy Reasey finished, and the class looked at Judith expectuntly. | She got through the rest of the; period in the same way, giving the, translation to students. who could he depended upon to: carry it through (And she kept her eyes on the door. ree o'clock she closed the; book impatiently. Eric had not! ‘come in. | The Stedway dinner table buzzed with the story or tee urder, The! Be journal “steal he sit, fi igus trom eke oll: torial room of the scl hool newspaper, ‘an onyiable iow, of. im-’ seca te . curiou: found him?” asked Caroline McGonigle,:her bluc eyes very wide. “Somebody working on the road | bus finding i y could only get the rest of Shea's gang.” Judith was too tired to take up t t dinney, when the house h down for an evening of stuc ter und sleep, Judith went dow is There was nobody in t Hower hall, and the Bepindy? on. cur Hitlgaae nee s, and two saplings that ha been torn down just swered Miss Reasey. she “He ran to the brink of the creek,’ and w and looked through the trees. Ju he houseman av the little bend, where all the boys Mr. Waters is not hing in the summer, there — Will Wetherel came mass of tangled automobile phone. ‘Hello, Jude, all covered with mud and by and th But it wasn't in the ereck ing f noon. him. ining dimly ne Just passi ht it might be you ¢ He hasn't been hon The gang's wenderi Ho much haye = y part slime. Pp r scrambled down the! about y high’ he hen he saw aught in some) I th weak “Can you tell me any mor “Nope, not. till tomorro' n back for help, and when! oar men in the 7 his friends eame to work with him, to help Doe Hilly they dragged out ihe body of Shea, mortem. But we after two hours digging and lifting. the grucsome The automobile was literally wrapped | to know is——where’ around him,” | Judith leaned aj ‘A row of horrified eyes looked at’ phone we the marrator from the other side of keeper. Will, knew where the table. was I wouldn't be calling him.” Late that night. Mrs. Timot! Brown called Judith. “When can see you alone?” she asked, Judith , ught # moment. don’t think you can afford to tal the risk. The dean and I quarrell this morning, to talk about ? One Koi i the inquest?” asked fternoon, They're Reasey spoke up. * mud ked letters cket that they're trying to and decipher,” she said, Can you ene now 7" © anything abput the ! his pocket?” “Nothing were some,” replied Judith. ‘ The woman at the other end the wire gasped.“ u" “You hadn't written for heaven's sake?” dith. “No, But | Geod night.” trying to nibble! reply, the. re went back to bed, Miss Siedway, “it The camp is to say, but I] ment the next ng—the wages of! dents stood on ev jing the death of Shea. Judith s: spoke up. “But the queer! many worried faces among them, is that. many a virtuous| her way to class. “God! Shea fy i ditch too.” the lowdown on her everybody,” | s! rd one boy say to his tallo doesn’t change matte skinned companion, I believe that Pend will be bet She hurried on to her classroo: ter off from now on—or would be, if| Here too, the excitement was gre ‘ { her reproach fully. rumor,” sh said. Tl Was not to be yy maybe he was steer the ear.” 1 y chimed him, had_ yo . exclaimed J no other off that | puzz! was mad with ex MR. TRUS TRIES NEW BARGER SHOP. HAS CHOICS OpetWwO. CHAIRS. =| eer a MAKES QUICK CHOICE. ONG WON'T MENTION HAIR TONIC notice! tute that siid off into thr noeaE ual parsimoni-| to the ich h with the post hould worry about i What I want, What is it you want) eZ abouts but a rumor that there Groups of stu-|" ‘y eornet, discuss- j, | Now to thor mates the wild ae SL seo that you Honbles? Cherry's thy wheel away from him, and yell eriap, sacrastio voive answered the] img iny head off, not when any car question ity Faith's eyes.) was ¢los: us, you understand, but little blue-eyed boy friend, | just to him b Math <i porsont® [have Hf he hadn't tar i Wochiehled hon eyes with al over on that hairpin curv J trembling Nand. Ohy it coutda't be| Turned the car ove Rob who would stoop so low as tol gg “Oh, darling, maila gin! Not Bobs-her Bob! wlook protty etek, Faith, € min drink of water or som Hill Warren's volee came to throweh waves of t poured over her. shook her head What else? How did you! hy on to see so much ! wich TE hadn't told were you you're a riot, F. chuckled. "‘Ne' hurt w-bit, but you oug! carl T jumped and Chris slid to an, Cherry a ey " im scrambling. knew the } 4 + ee child seeki was telling“ yuu,) walking around und areund Chris and P dunceds until Poawas so) and staggered on with the Rot that T beewed him to tak iden —-to get away from ther Pout on the veranda, We noticed as] on I came along,” Bill W we possed ed at Faith reassuring! handbaw that steuth, had divaype Lwent out on the veranda, and stood loaning against one of those {lor posts—atot talking, just Hiwoking at the moon.” » flushed under the gaze aceusing, pain-filled sith hat a sudden pictur as it must have been ep | » Hurry, the Well, wep-Clu dinner dance ‘inl lives in Marlboro, 1 rough home alone. 1 thought Just; bughouse or somethin s drivin s one see old fled Che With affe “You she whispored, ‘as Cherry | said {| paused. i hig nos yPecWell, then someone» bumped his head right unde our feet, You know j not quite high you think of Bob, from the grounil for a man iething, — u Wt itt —his up un it uth under Aw, honey,” warml h 1 hadn't ought you ought to as if you'd been Po He's nov {aid Chris. i then Chris v pped to the ground. n't enel tyou know, and he ndsome Har paper f xo to bed, “When Bob ht NOW, i ire € Fup on steps. time we we jfrom the j flivver wa: | “When did y {asked in a flat, ad) “Oh, don’t spe IY.) ing me to my n- | Jauzhed, he| Cheis she could roto vice to w Bob H doubted, Che a more The letters had un- out of h fice, writ- Ting along behind & he join Til?” Faith by beat- clin sherry little fool, I'd told let- his 1 to do 1 got » parked in his vest h ers, vs snographer bh at | the ‘only + without his hnowledge, pai [mail Cherry inte jilting old m | Cluny by come unserupulous ment of the Cluny family. Of cour: beean to sob w how had a steno; much about Cherry fae Bob Hathaway met -|in Marlboro county, where he's got) clandestincly ? me! cousin’ in the license bureau, who|” At last she did go to slepp, but only ng! promiscd Chris not to record it until’ after che had d tied to face Bol ou he gi the word. ; " with the damaging ev. | flashing it on me, like he did tonigh' inet’ likin: whieh Gheery had He can't get it through that I'm going to marry Mr. Cluny, and-—well, he tried the same old atunt again. Tried to, abduct, me| Stepped on the gas and lest Hand- E = Seep arty in about. two minutes, | TOMORROW: Faith calls at Bo then burnt up the roud toward Marl- Hathaway's offic borv. Imagine it! Me trying to grab dence against ‘him. Faith cchoed, ne license ly. of ins 26, NEA Service, Inc.) (To Be Continued) —__. | Justajingle oe ae He neede His el he hy The latest sheets of the town paper were spread dut on the desks. Judith called. the class to orde Near the end of the hour her ey: toward the, campus beyond * and she started, Eric) was walk toward the building. .As 3 c es se the only jack he had she watched, he reached it. and dis-| appeared from her v « Was underneath the seat. A few minutes late Np ie et et es in the hall outside he A THOUGHT he caught her e he pointed to the g—— left and went # . dismissed her c¢ rly and followed h m standing by overlooking a_ balcony ide corrider. che eried, d four new iires, but eg nce Was not so sw Jed int five| Fer riches She | selves wi window opened certai inly make them- '—Prov. 2 ; of Riches with care ¢ of riche: ou, u- kept The upon a are “wh ved the question asid n called uu? h shook her head. oP the d Judith a WAN DE TED The close re sease known itle a! th COW AND HU went on, “The finished RE st mortenl. Manners just teld| i udith steddied herself. “Did ullet holes: Wa re < inc W or. ad he | wet i ent tion Could it be, Judith wonders, that! of her random shot might have struch ! Shea? She is worried more when Eric is arrested. i} aaah us I. m. at. iv and the livestock industry. his experime that i { show ‘ plants horses he sun upon the lake is low, ' The wild birds hush their song, | The ‘hills have evening’s deepest xlow Yet Leonard tarries long. Now all whom varied toil and care {From home and love divide, i In the calm sunset may repair { Each to his lov'd one's side. DEER ARE PROFITABLE ton. --‘The reindeer — in- 1 to’ become Jan important fagtur in the future development of the territory, accord- jing tu the Biological Survey of: the ! United States Department of Agricul- REIN. \ Washi | dust, | he noble. dame, on turret hivby | tute, ho waits her gallant knight, Bi ak“ ciadaad Me Whe alte Rec aAUAn RAMND ,. ”| 2 Hine the ovizinal stock of 1830 The flash of armor bright. peingeee imported from Siberia there ree ere asia, with and on brow. as been an increase to about 350,- The level ray to. shad 4 000 animals. In addition to the nuns- | Upon ‘the footpath ‘watches now ers in present herds, it is esti- |For Colin's darkening plald, j mated that about 125,000 have been {killed for food and clothing. = | By, day ‘they swarm apart, lana to the thickest wanders slow 1 The hind beside the hart. E he woodlark at its partner's side, Twitters his closing song— Al! meet whom da and care divide, But Leonard tarries long! |S sir W. Scott: Datur Hora Quicti.| Bootie Batts Fins ele se D RARRS. | ‘One of the new silk stocking shades is“bark.” It’s.for Charleston dancers ind has some obscure reference to. shyins, | Consider the football referee. The odds are 22 to 1 against him, yet he ugually wins, "Meadlines you never ave: “SPRND,| SBEND!”" COOLIDGE: TELLS FED-|- | BRAL BUREAUS.” 7 Several eastern ptéactites® deny: helt. Probably. .thtey-néver took up! \Flaprer “anny Says: ' { | | | ‘ “pejent te Spe our’ of a majiman. “Famous Jast...lines s ing this show, anyhow?” fee} Berns Melee een tell. us we ure foaing the ly ‘they never <° who's|_ When hubby buys bushel of h ioe \lamw there eee ee ee ae

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