The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 28, 1927, Page 4

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oo aan saat — PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE wit fac The Bismarck Tribune’ An Independent Newspaper set ourselves | the a little more heavily on | ng a living. ‘ai ne Published by the Bismar Tribune Company, | : If ys sti fae 2 Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at (it is no i scapable out- marck as second clase mail ter. | come of e 4 we ourselves camel D, Mann... --President and Publiaber 3) i.o¢ provide the disiiiastoneds Vel growing older, may m j £87.20 | not like ae Son \ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ....+ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bisma: Daily by mail, per year, (in state guts Bismarck). Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Kureau of C Member of The Associated Press The Axsocieted Press is exclusively entitied to . 5.00 + 6.00 Editorial Comment | A Great Jurist at 86 | (Philadelphia Bulletin) the use for republication of all news dispatches . Justice Holmes, oldest forist “on. thn credited to it or ie Siete tae ee Gal ii 5 bench pevhaps “(ea csiaiae nd also the local news of spontaneous ol } ite “! Pablished herein. All rights of republication of all | in tribuna!—eelebrated the compl other matter ein wre aleo reserved. bai hty-sixth year on Monday by hand- momentous opinion abroga' the} barring negroes from te Democratic | y, iversary of his birth, es with no lent Roose: | Foreign Representatives GAN PAYNE COMPANY jicacg DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH atte dicial du g to his thi e of intere NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. 1902, persuaded him to exchange pe chief | | justiceship of Massachusetts for a seat in the must (Official City, State and County Newspaper) i iivirgul curt in the world. | For practically a quarter of a century the What We Can Do \dier-scholar-jurist has been conspicuous in the « son of Louis Unte preme court. It mo nificant of mitted suicide. So Mr m changes wrought American life that) that he will devote the hi little more than twenty : years after the civil | tu lessen the number of youthfu | war this brave Union officer, was wounded at He not at that ff, Antietam and Fredericksburg, should Sake Boe what youth needs, he ociated for many years with the chief jus who bad served as an offic Bratton, lin the opposing Confederate armies. An affection-| can do man Youth has shar It look bout jate relutionship existed between Associate Justice! careful serutiny, sizing up the world in which it{ Holmes and Chief Justice White hortly must make its wa ince years of liv-| Law and letters have joined in admiration of t ing have not yet dulled its visi ves many de-| literary style with which the son of the ects that we older ones mi Jautocrat of the breakfast table adorns his leg ‘ that we older ones lie to] @Pinions. A volume of his “Collected Legal Papers” | Sole ii prove ee eeee ean eat 920) sparkles with wit and abounds in epigrains | and delightful touches of Holine: “Kent? at the human philosophy. Jus- was editor of the standard edition of and it is curivus to reflect work was composed after Chan- ent was compelled to retire’ from the be honesty is the best poli¢ys-and look the other while scoundrels yet millfons by shady tell youth that virtue always triumph and Jet youth find out for itself that there are ex- | tice Commentaries, famou ceptions. We announce that vision and brains are ea lh find renbhod ite age linibotiG6 the qualities most prized by our nation-—and pay Justic: Holmes in passing upon t + consti n a Prldefighter more for one bout than a cole ity oh elalulee hes cin sauna n ei president gets in a lifetime | Hamiltonian principle that plen f ner or later, youth discovers that we are! powers to legislate for the .” misrepresenting the world life, Youth sees! jess it has be specifics Unite that we, having made the world what it is, dy not| States constitution. His confreres have nob alw seem to be very proud of our job, and constantly | been willing to go the whole y with him in th pretend that it has virtues that it has not. Jrespect. In general legal questions his learning Consequent!y youth grow disillusioned, an!) has led him to investigate the foundation of rule that carly jrather than unquestioningly to folluw time-honored Now restoring youth's faith is not a small job! precedents. Faith in the other world i probably something we! For a lay citizen, whatever his walk of life leave to our churches and to youth's own ex-| sociate Justice Holmes is a most encourapi jence of life. But faith in this world—that re-| ample of the truth that mind and will can. ov sponsibility is ours, jcome the handieap of long years in one who re How to do it? ‘That is a question, 1 might] fuses to allow old age to impair his usefulness as a help some if we dropped a little of the cant and] taithful and valuable F Saint 4 servant of the public. Sinner? ¢ é. eres, |, IN NEW YORK | oe * New. Yorks Murch 28.~ Every youngster with an ounce of adven NEA. SERVICE, INC. ture in his blood has planned at} After the luncheon recess, Church- whimpered, “but. Mr. Hathaway had Joust One runaway or sought to exe-| i bombarded Mary. Kear h left the door open ir eute hough he may never have! questions concerning Cherry's was blow ventu ther than the town park, (tune |dow in M there (tm reconsider bis rashness as) “Deseribe Miss Cherry's hat, Mary. afraid th drift in on the niyrht overtook hin What hind of ornament did it’ have | and Mr. Cluny was always ter Runting away in Manhattan is a}on itt ticular about his rugs and bit more invelved than in oa small] “It was brown velours, like town, vet hardly have sft it didn't have ent “So you closed the window, M D Of uring ,|Churehil shot the — words her which h nodded, ¢ room imme: Churehill thrust his gainst her as he shot against a city r. We misoi q ary stammered, but ft the poli ers! Aid | with fright. | tell me th an chart, almost to a You didn't stop at the ser and coming of spring by at ring er of small by did you Churchill's don er the roar of etions which Banning was shout sand, more be found hitt ly through th try which lies in ering, Mary Ki r when you joud weeping, — fumbl: iy jammed with linge Cluny on the s|handbag, drew out something and y having trying to get out of his clutehe flung it upon the flo just behind! “They were brown kid gloves, with here's the old aie bal hear of the| brown and tan cuffs, long cuffs, ng's face, turned penn n 1 with brown,” Mary answ by other niekels and Is and they're | ‘ed 4 moment too lat he froze into a mask of horror, “I off to try their luck. sure of that, Mary ?"/did have a diamond ring and--and I Bee ASEH IIL ating, sn aged the di rngaged and T wanted my girl ense’s exhibits would be those s Is to think my boy fee! Most youngsters of ¢ Igloves, short, cuffless, brown. kid eit to ey MeL alae cee AS | are made nomadic b sy stitched with darker brown rit, I didn't days. Oh, T wish] of their lives. W cross the knuckles. V'd never been born!” : watch over them th After a few more questions which] }*That's all, Churchill dering miles away showed with great clearness that} shouted gleefully, as pandemoniu who deliver papers or Mary really remembered very little the courtrooi thre th of the great city| about) Cherr ostuine, Churchill] — Reporters signaled. fru dh which th H. switched suddenly to a new line of Western Union bo: Ch Late into the night they can be! eross-examination: father and brother rea going about the dway} “You have testified that you went her, and Bob Hathaw » opening taxi doors for, back to Mr, Cluny’s bedroom after braced Fuith before Is or dancing in the st for) Mr, Hathaway had rushed out of the { pe a rane — greet th house, after he had discovered the can be seen huddling in tittle cireles| body.” Why did you do that, Mary? Churchill Bob about bonfires made from the drift-! Not ‘scared of being. alone with a 3 CP pede Ya wood of the streets, playing queer! dead man, were you Te but We Ghee Tae ee ae games with ancient decks of playing} “Yes, s wax scared,” Mary] defenwe when A RARE ALINE ecards or with discarded checkers th i ae. { These games ure native to the side B5 i walks of New York, and I have not 7 Hl through ithe Goll: Modul Bes / Yet kathered the point of any "of | Old Masters | WCCOr and WEAR, New yout | them. Like most games they are the Tuead Masaht fi ae este reeult of the environment in which, aoe noraet wipes é . they must be played. i . P ; What one notices most of all isj' * 24," abrupt and visionary psence of such 4: s tye and | pee re ree po bereg aE ay I suw the huddled tenements arise, | Phe advance hands are announced us learn early the dangers of dodging | Here where the merry clover danced 8; | into streets which may, at any mo-| . and shone | Sidney S. Lenz, dealer, “South” holds | ment, be choked with machines, Borenw agents Of tron and ote 7 4. | here, where green Silence laughed JB, spot 6 eee | or stood enthralled, Diamondeca 2. Such ix the scattered distribution | Cheap music blared and evil alleys Clubs-Q J 1054, of nationalities through the East{, sprawled. Milton. Work, “West,” holds | Side that merchants, and particularly |The roaring avenues, the sheicking Spades —8, spot 6 2. { cafe men, find it ‘profitable to. be mills; isricrs lingwiatically adept, Proprietors of | Brothels and prisons on those kindly Diamonds—A K Q 3. scores of the little places off the! hills— a, upot 6% tenement belt find it necessary to/ The menace of these things swept| John I Smith, “North,” holds speak three or more languages. { over me; pades-K “J 3, But the hand-painted -slang dic-) A threatening, — upeonquerable Hearts A 109-4 { tionary goes to a little coffee house| seu... Diamonds--8, apot 7 5. | over on Stanton street, just off} Clubs—9 7 3, Allen, where a sign in the window | A stirring landscape and a gener-| Wilbur ¢. Whitehead, Cust,” holds rea “French, Greek, Turkish, | ous earth! Bouilearck : Arabic, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese | Freshening courage and benevolent Hearts—K Q 2, and English spoken her A Harel mirth— : Diamonda—J 109 2 education, I calls it, And then the city, like a hideous Clubs_A Ky sore a nother sigu in etek? Dey Fev rand of another die | coud God, and what is all this beauty or a corner of the window appears this —"Strietly Kosher.” if GILBERT SWAN, [A THOUGHT Hut when thou doest alms, let not —Louis Untermoyer: “Landscapes,” ¢ recognized necessities in Wash- H House a wh present in the stout Sa ingle Cithees ase yen alae. vretty maid?” “a. t thy left hand know what thy right hand ? Radio Bridge Hand ‘decth=-Matthew vi2. OR win cli te a, abe ae Y "go pita til Four New York bridge experts] A man should fear when he enjoys have arranged the hands ‘and the de-| oply what good he “doce publ i tall of play. for. the radio auction| te it bridge game to be sent on the air'the charity, that he loves ?—Beccher. No Cooks Wanted in the Devifs Kitchen JUST Now Bae ee / _ BYIGET Away Fron rene. WE HAVENT YET GOTTEN QvER TAS MESS TRET WAS COOKED UP IN FERE TARIEEN YeaRS AGO 7 MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1997 ‘of bitferhess in bis heart. Mrs. Johnston was absolutely within her rights. Mary was a precious por- session. Besides, thongh Ned did not consciously formulate = thix thought to himself, it made the game #0 much more exciting to have opposition. An implacable mother was almost as exhilarating as a rival. This ‘er thought brought Ned up with @ sudden start. It dawned upon him that he was dreaming wildly, with very little foundation for hig dream. He knew absoluteiy | nothing about the girl. But when ‘has thdt fact discouraged a lover? ! Claude was at the entrance of ' the store when Ned drove up. After | the first glance he hurried Ned within. Ned noticed with amuse- ‘ment that Claude pursned the THE STORY same tactics as Mrs. Johnston, or- CHAPTER 1—With a strange dered Aunt Lrddy to see that Ned whom he introduces as his nephew, had a hot bath immediately, and Ned Carter, Claude Melnotte Dabbs: also mentioned bed. He agreed to returns from New York to his gen- the first, but scorned the latter. eral. grocery at Peace Valley, Pa.’ |To “Aunt Liddy,” his housekeeper, Later he told pc rig eeHinie: jhe explains that Carter is a chance ; scguntntance, veteran. of the World “Lucky you were there. and I'm war, whom he had met and taken a; glad it wasn't more serious. Did liking to. you see Mrs. Johnston? , i “Mrs. Jobnston? Oh. yes! You igs tea ee tells Aunt! couldn't help xeeing Sirs. John- . and his sweetheart because! *ton—if she was around. Awfully resentment of their ultra: fond of Marr. She isn't a bit ike | pacific tendencies. With Dabbs Ned; Mary—er—Miss Johnston. _ visits Cloper Hollow, abiding place| “No,” said Claude. dryly. “ap- jof a “collection of good-natured| parently not. You didn't notice anr- |erankss” according to the grocer. | thing elne, did rou? Wasn't there They almost run over a dog longing to a girl whom Carter a parently recognizes. Ned delivers a grocery order and in his absence |the girl, Dorothy Selden, reveals jthat she knows him to be Ned Carter Rangeley, son of Loren Rangeley, New York banker. CHAPTER Ill. commenecs work j boy. At a residence, the “White House,” he delivers an order marked |“Johnston.” There he meets a girl [who tells him she and her mother jare alone in the house, the servants ‘having left them because of the —— “loneliness.” He promises to try to | procure household help. Arrange- | ment is made for cook to go to the | Johnstons’, | CHAPTER IV—The cook being Se Copyright, 1938, by Margaret Teradell ‘WRU Service be-| a aingle little thing about this Mrs. | Johnston that marked her out cee red- any other pleasantspoken, “Her good looks,” Ned blowing a cloud of smok: celling. ‘hey were extra “Oh my G—d! Ned, you are an exasperating youngster.” Ned studied Claude's perturbed ‘countenance, Then it slowly dawned | upon him that there might be a reason for this exceas of feeling, {| ‘Not—not trying to check up your ! red-headed Polly girl with her, are | you?” “And, if T am,” declared Claude. shaken out of his usual good-hu- mored acceptance of things as they rocer's as a “gr By Allene Sumner Chapter > much ughter, the dau ot And the riding motormans, night nthe the i herself whieh he Dancing Partners Furnished sf al social secretaries who will everything und anything from ar themselves with a 4 buttonhole to guide and elderly dowager through ‘ THEY’RE ALL ALIKE By Bess Bly SAY-WE NEED ANEW CARS Our oLb One NEEDS NEW OIL,A' AVANITY BOX, AN'a MoTor METER, 665/085, I DONT LiKE THE Trimmine! — Bel L we tke MY TRIMMING —IP WE GETANEW Car! Being Intimate Stories \ »the Womans Side of Official Life in the Capital. o some of the most prominent families in Washington society. and Servants Washington with open arms the humblest sixth secretary of a foreign legation, but f. the front door of aristocratic society is always closed to the intricate mazes of the dance, ify r check is big enough, Back on Main Street a young’ man be insulted unless id ticket to a show, on the girl's vily. upplies the ticket. th for bo in quite x demand. Small should the Sowing of the Deb Crop ng of the deb crop is 1 rly | White lists. which nice sum, But they those well-groomed ! reforred to gro tissanale_who-toll jes as “tradesmen.” It not, cither do they drive cars, unless, Hificant that on ery Washington it he the car of some rich woman, | # ent is the sign, “Tradesmen Use Rear society will Entrance.” welcome nging place cards in the White tradesmen, ‘ ite dining room to teaching, But. one social aceretary decided congressman to take u chance on the 8 n introduced, i daughter. She arranged a young out” tea for her at one of the most » sent out the en- . graved invitations—but not six peo-, f, ple attended, old story of supply and, sup upply spend | pos ‘of the F men DERE * down over her, | are,“a ‘lot of help I'm getting from ' yout” “What was your—Polly's name?” “Mary—Polly—Johnston.” Ned whistled. “If ft was the daughter—this Mary girl now. I suppose I could get deti and like as not she's ible to begin work at once, Ned its the White House to inform Miss | Johnston of the fact, Explaining | the situation to her mother, the | girl, “Mary,” is astonished by that | lady's emotion at the mention of | Dabbs’ name. The'cook arrives, and | Mary, with Ned, goes to the village | for groceries. They are seen by twice as ordinary as the mother.” | Dorothy Selden.’ | “Nonsense ied rose to the de- | CHAPTER V.—There is something fense of his lady, “Mars—Miss Johnston, I mean, has the most ex- traordinars blue eres “Jiminy, Ned, have I got to hear ubout Mary vaguely familiar to | Dabbs, and he is highly interested in | village gossip concerning the mother and dcughter. Mrs. Johnston ac- that again? I got blue eyes my- | companies Mary to an inn for lunch- gejf," The Case of Mrs. Wilson jeon. Dabbs sees Mrs. Johnston” is Neq looked at Claude and cave dwellers” sharpened | his wife, “Polly,” and is disturbed. s when they heard, for in | He informs Ned hé has something on gasped. He leaned toward him and “The: the same color as t none lest than the presi-| Mis mind that he would Hike, tp tell senna. . dent of the United States, Woodrow , hin. 1 @ Wilson, was “paying attention” tol orapres 7 ’ [Bipot par iile Mien pol CHAPTER VIL—Claude reveals to lips compressed. “Ned, you'vé had’ a‘hard day and I've come darn near losing you, so nothing on earth will make me pick a fight tow. But if you want to do me the greatest favor, take a and wake up able to say one le sentence straight through without dragging that girl’s exes in.” He left the room abruptly. “All the same,” Ned told himself as he reached for a book, “their eyes are very much alike. Mary Johnston slept the sleep of exhausted youth, and wo! re- freshed, to find her mother sijting at her bedside. inisa “Why, Mumsy,” Mary stretched out « slim, warm hand to her moth- er, “have you been worrying about the widow of a The widow was } Galt, j Ned a romance of his early life. He ad married, while at college, and under peculiar circumstances, and his wife left him the day after the ceremony. He is convinced “Mrs. Johnston” is his wife, “Polly,” and naturally wants to know, who is Mary? socially,” according to the| ‘st Lady of to kow-tow unto Mary stooped and kissed her Uttle hostess and thanked her warmly, promising to be back to visit her soon. “Oh, if you'd do that, that would be wonderful! Jest to have some one come in and see me. I don't ever want for anything,” she sald never “got even” with the tab-| Proudly, for the Sayers were an s who called her “that tradesman’s | old fa and Phoebe never: for- low.” got it. ncle Nate's got’ plenty, Invite Her Own Beau and he's so kind to me, But I do the season 12, well-known| love company.” zs cretary general invites al if the debs to a tea, Thus they meet| » Uncle B Mea egg eon one another. Then they file applica-| pod, "el sed std ii tions for the services of ‘the soc ome ; there’a a: shower coming. secretary. She takes charge of every-| Ned realized that Uncle Nate did thing—mails the invitations to hun-| not wish Phoebe to know of a cer- dreds of “the best people” whom the) tain financial transaction, in which deb in question has never seen. The} wear and tear to his barn and deb may not even invite her own] kitchen and the loan of dry cloth- ing had been duly and minutely calculated. They sald very little. They had both been shaken out of the groove in which they had. been comfort- it apy, ee the Prgms ot ie So: this drive. Ned was no longer a Mary finished her dinner, ‘and merely amusing gtocer’s clerk. He when she relinquished the tray, was a man who had held her in said; ““Sfother, couldn't we sort his arms, who had called her over ‘the jewelry tonight?” ‘dear” and had saved her life. An Mrs. dohnston agreed and went for Ned there was' no longer any tom the room with the tray. Mary need for, question. . Mary might be lay back on the pillows and con- still vague about her feelings to- + inpiated the ceiling, a little frown ward him, but he knew now what her brows. If it was not she meant to him. He had known having to sell the jewelry and be- it from the moment he came up ing poor, what was it t was ont of the water with her in hip (Of Dice. wie wit urely she wal arms, She was the one girl. the sor worrying about this—this Mr. ‘tnd “her predecessors were pale, CArter? ni r pi rs were pale, “At the same moment Claude dows in the long ago. Mary sine gti! at his desk, alxo was what he had been: searching | owning, jooked up from his writ. for, longing for. | _ + | ing as Ned came into the room. He knew it now. It was wonder. | 7c yr aren't you rather jump- ful. It was romance; romance ing at conclusion: ‘Johnston’ ts come upon guddenly in the midst o° “from being an uncommon of common, évery-day life. name, and ‘Mary, with ‘Polly’ for 1 ce Lagoa Roo long. | short, is far from being uncommon, Geter lary, who ak ox hich | either; therefore the combination . Ing to amooth down. jot really tells you nothing.” Before Ma Fergueson stepped out| had dried thoroughly, but rampant- | ""Cisude nodded. “I told myself she all but emptied the prisons in| ly in the breeze. 1 do hope | ict, too, at first, but Texas, Can’t Illinois and Te: get) she's not anxious.” The most reproductive insect Mm CHAPTER Vill . _ the world is the white ant, which R8. JOHNSTON was not only | lays atid anzious, but annoyéd, and was prepared to show her annoy- ance. Then she caught sight of Mary's. wet heir end strange clothes. Instantly she eliminated from her world everything but Mary, until she had her in her arms and was convinced that she was safe and sound. ‘hen, and then, only, did she In- clude Ned in her gaze, and for a moment Ned wished he were {n- visible. The mother's eyes were like those of a tigress who has re- covered her cub and sights the hunter who tried to take it away. They softened, almost in: iy. when Mary told her all she owed SU to Mr. Carter. ( ley’s Honey and Tar Compound! The tigress disappeared utterly 2 at once distressing, alarming Mrs. Johnston hurried Mary into bronchial symptoms. ‘It loosens the! the house, with instructions as to a hursh cough, raises phlegm eesily.| not bath and bed. ‘Then she turned soothes the irritated mucous mem-| 1, xe4 ‘and ordered him home a8 ‘brane, eases the disagre: te Hehe st he could go. He might eab! that worse toward { me ‘fall. Mont Me, i. ‘M.—Charl ton, | come .tomorrow. “{ am glad to say thet} She held out her hand and rr} Ter d/ me) thanked him gratefully and sin- Be ie asdlcine, oate and after: | (OTT. aa zat diumianed blr back is a reliable 5 ito les ave for. cor colds in: chil tron enlels be ae it agi eis v ughs and b bic! out grown persens. on ‘or| 1 Ned drove apgy withno thought! «Is the game, women pate te sremgery poor een to. pieces during the wooing days president, v women have ever graced the House with the poise and dignity and courage of this Mrs. Wil- son, and the greatest evidence of her real worth was the fact that, though given! glorious opportunity to do so, Johnston stooped and You are all I have in the world, so you're rather precious to me. You're not to get up. I've had my dinner, and,yours is on the tray ready to bring up.” “Mother!” lay still and wohdered. ‘ou got a dinner! Why I. never even dreamed you knew how “There's lots of undiscovered country about mother, though you'se known her all your life, + You'll find it out same to 5 eau. Her fate is decided after the com- ng-out tea, If the invitations come in thick and fast, she is accepted. If not, she might as well dig a hole in the ground and pull the cover The cost? Oh, she can get through a season with $10,000 if she is cai ) says social als CALLING THEM NAMES In Virginia a man named Utah and a woman named, Rhode, Island were married, Who said’nevér the twain shall meet? 1. all pstart having ‘own. “And f" they ran out of states, Alaska and Hawaii might furnish names for the children. . . . In case of twins there are North and South Dakota to fall back on. . . . There could be trouble though. Sup- pose one of the children named Florida went to. California, What chance would he have to live? . . . If they’d name one Alabama though, he might have a chance for at least 24 votes, . This couple could Two New York girls won $100 cach for their essays on thrift. We are just wondering if it was clothes they were writing about. | drews is weeding out “ignorant” prohibition agents. It seems some of the boys are all wet. A stork was placed in a cage with a lion in a German zoo. The lion fled in fear, Maybe the king of beasts was just sure the bird was going to shout “Triplets!” at him, The musician symp! a | concerto that u: player planos, an airplane propeller, a set of bells, ete, must have: tried to sleep next door to a riveting ham- mer, BRONCHILIS—"FOLEY'S” RELIEF GIVES Vaz | b vb eee eo -- -

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