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4 . , PAGE FOUR ' The Bismarck Tribune wey An Inde; Newspaper NSWSPAPER Independent Ne THE STATE'S OLDEST F (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. D., and entered at the postoffice a! ond class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Adv: Bismarck, N. Bismarck as Daily by carrier, per year Daily by male per year, Waily by mail, per year, in state vutside Bismarck) . = Daily by mail, outside of North Dal Member Audit Bureau of Circu! Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tc use for republication of all news dis: sredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. the (in Bismarck): —. complish our full duty in each instance, without violence. It is a large question and it is not possible to say off-hand that it can be accomplished, yet we hope that in some way it can be. Our duty to | Americans in China i It is to safeguard their lives and protect them from bodily harm. very clear, however. We do not, however, owe them the $7.20 safeguarding of their property or their merchan- | +++ 720{dise. As American citizens they are entitled to! the protection of their flag, but as individuals and not as regards their physical possessions. Our duty to those other nations with whom we are associated in certain pacts with China, which} now seem to he abrogated but which we are never- theless bound to adhere to for the time being, is | cle: We must stand by them. We must protect their. nationals together with or own and we | itches must do it without qaibbling. Peedon Reseteatattons But our greatest and most difficult duty is the | G. LOGAN PA NE COMPANY tone we owe to China from a humanitarian stand- CHICAGO DETROIT | point. We, who ourselves made such a struggle to! Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg | make America wholly American, must treat with | NEW YORK PAYNE, BURNS @ S MITH Fifth Ave, Bldg (Official City, State and Ccanty Newspaper) Investigate First The progress recorded within the recent in protecting American their savings them by unscrupulous stock promoters is an en- couraging development of the within is the the money market. promulgated for the purpose of educating the aver- * age American investor to “investigate hefora you] President of Columbia university, ever The manner about five y invest.” experienced investors were their Liberty bonds for worthless The first education work was undertaken by the/day by day and night by night to undermine con- |° newspapers of the nation, in the larger cities, and] fidence in the republic, soon received the hearty cooperation of the stock! and to substitute a desire on the part of the cial interests. Better | people to try new forms of government, warranted | business bureaus began to spring up supported for}to cure all the social and economic evils of the age. | y exchanges | islation began to be advocated in whereby the worst features of, Butler. hange and of various finan stock worthless might be whereby adequate judicial machinery was inaugur- e ated that would enable the authorities to up” a thoroughly bad situation. Thanks to a real spi vigorous public agitation to banker. Every safeguard should be placed around persons so that they find it hard to invest money foolishly, for many persons get money, by inheritance many times, who have little conception of how or when These inexperienced persons must be protected from the confidence man who would turn to invest. investors in worthless securities in the investment markets country and is a generally stabilizing force! The sult, without question, of the campaign better campaign was begun in a serious rs ago, following many sad : experiences which resulted after the war when in- persuaded “securities.” it of cooperation and to a “investigate before you invest” the ordinary man on the street is be-lof the advocates of these other governments. coming wary of putting any of his hard earned money in any scheme unless he first consults his | that inexperience to his own profit. Our Duty in China We have a duty in China to Americans who are We have a duty in China to other foreign- ers who are there under pacts to which we were And we have a duty to China. problem is to reconcile all these duties and to ac-| > there, a party. sympathy and understanding a China whose ma are struggling, though blindly perhaps, for the fre jdom of their country from, foreign domination. We say today, perhaps, tnat the Chinese are backward and unfit to rule themselves without foreign supervision. We make that an excuse to exploit China, but it is a thin excuse, for that is exactly what England said prior to the revolution- ary war. But the colonies broke away from Eng- land and China must go free. Let us hope the transition may be accomplished without plunging the world in war. y from pl forced acing upon situation paseo Government on Trial One of the truest things Nicholas Murray Butler, id, was that parliamentary government is on trial today! throughout the world. In every country ther movements tending to overthrow the existing representative governments and substitute dicta-' torships, communism, anarchism and socialism. In every part of the world th forces are working to trade the limited monarchy, and private) “We have got to prove our right to existence or | else give way to communism and fascism,” says “We all are put to it to improve our of government or else yield to our ei In other words, we must be active, not “clean! passive, advocates and enthusiasts for the repub- | lican ‘form of government as we know it today. | If we are merely passive there is no wall con- sciously erected against the insidious propaganda | eliminated and own forms What Dr. Butler is of course pointing out t> us! is the fact that we are criminally negligent of the responsibilities which we owe our government. For instance, every time there is an election and you do not vote, you have voluntarily relinquished your only direct voice in the conduct of your public affairs. Men have fought and died for that vote. Women have worked decades for it. Yet what a small proportion of people use it! They are dis- enfranchising themselves. They are saying, by that very negligence, “Well, I don’t care. What| does my vote matter What difference is there between that and having the vote taken from you by another form of government? We need not fear revolution and social unres' if we each accept our responsibility and perform our duties conscientiously. Our {BARBS i ° TERRORS OF TELEVISION With television in effect the only other problem we've got to face is to make a night club look like the heside of a sick friend. . Be careful when calling up to say that you've been called away suddenly and Churchill was not through with Mrs. A the jury whether you Tater changed in your attitude toward your father's E:Saint of Sinnci® In spite of that dramatic climax,! neath a fantastic turban of gold metal cloth, tossed her head as she answered, defiantly : “West Tenth Street—No. 1840." Ripley, do you recall the of Tuesday, September 28, o 1g | rather, the early mor Mbright. “Now, Mrs. Allbright, will you tell will ‘be out of town for a couple of fiance?” a orning hours of = days. The poker chips might give} w1 , 7» | .| Wednesday, September 29?’ Ban- you away. » By television the! ,,.1gno—I—" Mrs. Allbright stam-| ning asked, referring to notes in his human face can be cast hundreds of | ™¢red. ‘ | hand. miles, sayy the experts. For some,|,,,“Did you not, on Friday, October “Sure I do. I was at Sam Lee's that isn’t far enough. . So the} 22, pay a friendly call upon Miss | chop suey joint with Chris Wiley,” | Irishman was right afier all when “Somebody to see you on Rejected suitor tries to commit suicide, but swallows quinine instead of poison. Proving that it is bitter to have loved and lost. Motorists are demanding cars, So are pedestrians, there. are yes-men and no-girls. sway y It’s a long lane that has a place to park. ad A man is judged by the company he keeps out of. often can be found ha Low brows beneath high Now that the coal miners have } gone on strike, would it be too much to ask the gold diggers to follow 4 suit? Benito Mussolini declared vehem- ently that no man ever became world- famous while wearing long whisker: It’s true, then; there ain't no Santa : Claus, | Old Masters | CY A fire-mist and a planet— A crystal and a cell— : A jellyfish and a saurian, And caves where the cave men dwell; Then a sense of law and beauty, And a face turned from the clod— Some call it Evolution, And others call it God. A haze on the far horizon, The infinite, tender skv The ripe, rich tint of the cornfields, i And the wild geese sailing high— And sil over upland and lowlan r e charm of the goldenrod— ' Some of us call it Autumn, And others call it God. * A picket frozen on duty— egy 3 eget gtd hag } Socrates drinking the hemlock, id Jesus on the rood; a tor 8 who, bumble and I Cherry Lane, {future stepmother j with a broad smile. ibright flashed angrily. ‘m- | ; bling hand was raised to touch a wisp! as the defendant was then known, at of lace handkerchief to her trem- bling mouth. lighter, friendly one?” Churchill persisted. Mé@ern youth is safe as long as, Allbright admitted haughtily. asked suddenly. hi | Banning, the distri Jonly one que your own right, are you not, | Allbright 2” jman and I inherited a ‘fortune from my mother.” ‘h; seventeen-year-old debutante daugh- ter, Muriel, also fashionably dressed in mourning for the dead man, her grandfather. | ed loudly. | Banning asked, after the preliminary questions as to name and age. rouged and over-dressed in a tight jsleeveless sheath of red satin, | kinkily-waved black hair showing be- if At the | from my father, whom I loved, after | Sf uccenting her as your) Flo Ripley answered pertly, drum: Churchill asked! ming upon the arms of the witness! 3 \chair with highly polished, pointed! "Mrs. All- finger nails. One trem-| “Did you see “I called on her— ss Cherry Lane, Sam Lee’s on the night in question?” Banning asked with a smile. | “Sure I did. Me and Chris was | there for supper after a show and “The visit was a pleasant oni “Well—yes, I had decided to make|to dance, when her and her sister,| tthe most of a bad bargain,” Mrs. Faith, and George Pruitt and. Bob i" .,,| Hathaway come in,” Flo answered “Why, Mrs. Albright?” Churchill | readi “Go right on with the story of that} evening's events in your own way, iss Ripley,” Banning smiled. Well, me and Chris dancing, | and Sam Lee put on a Charleston contest, and Bob Hathaway and in Cherry and four or five other couples | Mrs, lined up to take part in the con-| test, and IT made Chris trot me out,| because I'm a champion Charleston: | ' “I—I did not want to be estranged is marriage. When the witnes. was returned to attorney askes “You are ric ns Her answer, given haughtily, was: Mr. Allbright is considered a rich comfortable as brief as possible, Miss Rip- Banning advised her. “Well, I'm trying to,” Flo tossed her head defiantly. “We was just going to,begin the Charleston when| Cherry Uane saw me and Chris, and | lit into Chris because he was on a date with me—" | “Please give Miss Cherry's exact words, as nearly as you can remem- | ber them,” Banning instructed her, casting a’ pleased look at the busily | scribbling reporters. Mrs. Allbright left the courtroom astily, joined at the door by her “Call Flo Ripley!” Banning direct- “Where do you live, Miss Ripley?” The pert, hard-faced girl, over- TOMORROW: Flo Ripley meets her match in Churchill, who flays her un: mereitully. Headland. Our Little Chinese Cou- sin, Mokrievitch, When I Was a Boy in, Russia. | her Bismarck | Public Library :' “ i} ae : Book of Poetry © The following Juvenile bo oy il inThacher & Wilkinson, ‘The Listen-| ready for circulation at the Room of the Public Library today: | Book of Flowers | Tairy Tales | Burgess. Flower Book fr Chil-| MacDonald. The Light Princess. een: | Olcott. Wonder Tales From China 7 Stories | Beas r | Meigs. The Pool of Stars. | About People | Smith. Children of the Lighthouse. | Babin” paffale Bhi tsa the 0 {a THovent 1 ‘abin. uffalo al je Over- 1 land Trail. TH HT Wade. The Wonder-Workers. .,_A THOUGHT | Abost Indians = Catlin. My Life Among the Indians.) Love is the fulfilling of the law: Fox. Indian Primer. | xilis1@, Starr, American Indians. | Sage Holland. kore, it the only, possession which | ean carry wi eyond the! | grave.—Madame No oreign ries De Groot. When I Was @ Girl ig hear Dirt Destroyer.’ If you haven't seen | the signs on the billboards— “I have seen them, Deplorably THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Copyright, 1986, by Margaret Pusadull, ‘WNU service “THE STORY As Claude came toward her, Polly stared, then her eyes changed and the pupils contracted, He had been much in her thoughts lately, aud despite the years, she kuew this must be the man she most’ dreaded, first long look, she actually recog- nized h Polly stopped for a mo- ment, then came on. Claude stood fu th yrner waiting for her, and she fi him, “A trick?’ she asked fn a low vole “No,” Claude answered her stead- ily. “How are you, Polly? Tam here with a message about Loren Rangeley. He will-be at my hotel in half an hour, dn time for after- hoon tea, and the idea was that wu should join us there to meet , him Whose fdea?” asked Polly. “And who are us?” “My Idea,” Claude answer promptly, “and us are Mar: Ned Kangeley, Loren’s son, “E dowt think L know him.” “Yes, [think yeu do, but you know him us Ned Carter, His as and She Faced Him. e is Ned Carter Rangeley. He at Peace Valley with me,” , the young man who dre! "admitted Claude, and ‘aited. He had not to t long. “I mt like your idea,” Polly told | him out of the window, “And,” she continued, still g past him, “L have wo desire to be one of ‘uy’ She rose us though the Inter: as ut an end, Claude rose, t stood sv that he blocked him, looking » Polly,” he sald, “and why it might be better to change your mind.” Polly hesitated. Unless she de- sired a scene, there was no getting past that solid figure She had to look at him The look re- lieved her, The man before her had changed with the years, but he was nelther a boor nor a clown, She had not been so fatally wrong ut Claude years ago, ere was “a something” about Claude Dabbs. iy sat down, fake it brief as you can,” she asked again looking past him, “This | sort of thing is—tiring.” “I didn't choose it.” Claude told her, “It was forced upon me, and | 1 understand just how you feel. I'm here solely on Mar ‘y!” breathed Polly, “Leave put of it, as much ma: you | saw Claude's face change, | and realized that before her was a | man who was keeping a tight rein | on hls emotions and speech, for her | suke, Not thus would he choose to speak to her of Mar; “Mary told me that for Lorer Polly fil knot had sent * he began, and he saw ch, “You might have | she would. You might know | how she'd feel about it.” “I did know. “Well, then, you can understand when I told Mary that Loren was coming to see me, and that his com- had nothing to do with his iting to see you, but was purely a matter of business, that Mary | wanted to know at once. Mary | thought she ought to rush to you right away and warn you of the; true state of affairs, “And for reasons of your own, | you prevented her, Well, 'm wait- | ing to know the true state of af- fairs.” Claude drew a long breath and looked at the graven image beside him. It did not really seem worth hile, but he had promised Mary. That Loren would never have said atever he hus sald to you— if he'd known you were Mrs, Dabbs. I'm worth a great many thousand a year to Loren Rangeley. ‘To him L am Dabbs of “SCOUREEN, the ugly.” But Polly was looking at} him now. | “Well, ugly or not, you know it spells money. There's plenty for you and Ma “For Mary—yes.” “You're legally entitled to your, share, without having to take me with “Claude informed her coolly. . ou thi Tndeed, after the | ‘here, in this old, regal, beautiful jboleth that had shaken her newly “It will be much pleasant- | ©! eee taking Loren’s money, I can |.By “It's all very interesting,” Polly | Informed him, and now she was looking at the floor, “but still T | fall to see why T should come—this | afternoon.” | “For Mary,” Claude told her | short Ned Icangeley's in love her. ly started. “And of course, ¢ pleased?” ‘Only if Mary wants him. I'd | like to keep her myself, Just as much as you would, but we can’t.” | He gave her a long look, “You might think of her, Polly. Why should our d—n blunder cloud | this bit of her life? You've made @ good job of Mary, far, Polly. I ' have to hand you that returned with finality, “finish your job.” Polly looked at him now, saw | what he meant and went white for ; @ moment. Claude waited, never tuking his eyes from her, It was a long minute, “TH come. Wait till I change my gown.” | “No time,” Claude told her. “You fine as you are.” | And the red-haired devil knows | tt." he added to himself as he mar: | shaled her through the lobby to the | gondola steps. | Polly studied the man who sat | beside her as the gondola carried them along the canal. It was even | faintly amusing that after all these yeurs they should be sitting side | by side in’a gondola in Venice. Her mind flew back to the time she had {so resolutely put behind her. A | dull New Jersey boarding house, and Claude Dabbs at the window, on a hard wooden chair, and she, with a duster tucked under her arm, lifting a water pitcher. How life had taken and molded them both, and then flung them together, « ide by side they sat, strangers ‘ for twenty years and more, and yet between them dangled the old legal fetters, and waiting for them at the hotel was Mary, the Hving proof that they who were strangers Low. a | At The Movies | ELTINGE THEATRE Picturesque of locale, powerful in its love story and presenting one | of the most red blooded fights ever | seen on the screen, “The Sea Tiger, featuring Milton Sills, Astor, jand Larry Kent is being shown at {the Eltinge today and Saturday. ‘The setting is tiny hamlet in the Canary Islands, that famous and colorful group of islands in mid- Atlantic, belonging to Spain. Sills plays the role of a powerful Spanish fisherman, of great strength of character, who is torn between | his love for his younger and weaker brother, Larry Kent, and Mary Astor, a fisherman's daughter, whom both the brothers love, Against the stormy background of the sea the tale unfolds itself with ishing craft dip their against the horizon as ‘the course of true love runs any but smooth. Alice White, as a tle brained little Spanish theatric: trouper, causes most of the trouble. CAPITOL THEATRE Buck Jones, hargriding Fox Films star, will begin a two diy engage. ment ut the Capitol Theatre tonight in “Whispering Sage,” a tense drama! of the Southwest in which the pop lar Western ace is seen at his bes in some hair-raising situations, | The action centers about the love and homestead of Mercedes, a charm- ing daughter of a Basque patriarch, who is threatened by a band of de: unscrupulous rancher with a band| of thugs under his control The proprietor of an.inn at Diko- vina, Siberia, served customers with “whale steaks” which proved to be from the carcass of a mammoth that | had been preserved in arctic ice for! many centuries. A complete line of Easter Coats, Suits, Dresses and Mil- iinery is here for your selec- tion at remarkably low prices.’ —Sarah Gold Shop. had not always been so. Polly's mind swung round to the t that had not really tm sed her as being the most fmn- not only but he was successful, how she had never visualized that. It began to dawn on the P Johnston of today that the Polly Johnston of yesterday had under. thon ng to with the man, himself silent beside her, to the morning she had made up her mid to leave. She did herself Justice, It was not the money, entirely, that had made her decide. he remembered doubting Claude's 1 magination, capability life in a larger way than Just that of a storekeeper In a country village. She remem bered how she had tried the shib- awakened desire to st: With that trepidati she had put to him that half-laughing. wholly earnest question about ala baster lamps, waiting to have him show, in ever so feeble a manner. that he understood; and he had her utter She renew: bered his slow, unimaginative, eo trified manner and answer; some thing about “burning coal oil.” It had been the straw, if he had only known It, that showed her how the wind blew; and she had gone out of his life to save her soul and high ambition, not her mon But jude would never believe that. No more than he would be lieve that now It was for Mary, not leis money, that she was accom: panying him to the hotel, She must try and make him understand all Us when Mary's affairs were ar- ranged. ge began to wonder about his fe. Claude touched her arm gently. He was holding out his hand to help her from the gondola, and he was doing it gracefully, Mary ‘and Ned had begun very badly. Claude's abrupt departure had found them both unprepared. Mary had risen to her feet impet- uously and followed him to the door, only to realize that it looked absurd and to go back to th y dow, where she stood w: her father depart. “One father gone and ani ther coming, kes a com afternoon,” she ventured. Ned agreed, and suggested that to while away the tlme between fp- thers they might order a peculiarly rich tea. The waiter had come and gone, and still they were in thut tire- some sitting room, which seemed to Mary to have held them for ‘I suppose we'd better here?” she inquired lightly. “Much better,” and Ned drew a wicker chair to the,balcony window for her, and arranged himself on a cushion at her feet. Mary felt grateful. She did not have to meet his eyes, in this position. “Sure as we stay out of this room,” he told her, “my father will turn up and then Claude will ac- cuse us of deserting our posts.” “Do you call my father ‘Claude’?” inquired Mary, for want, of some- thing better to say. “L'il call him ‘father,’ gladly goon as you give me the right,” Ne reminded her, and turned to ‘see how she took it, X¢ She did not take it at all. She leaned against the chair, her face hidden in her hands, (tu BE CONTINUED.) i Justajingle | He tried to jump across the stream, ‘With all his pep and vim. He didn't make the grade. Instead He stopped and took a swim, with him. stay Notice to Grocers" Notice is hereby given that jn permnnce cent 10, the of groceries on Sundays will be strictly enforced in the future. It is unlawful to sell with the ex- ception ‘of specified 4 cr SUITS Peradoes headed by Hugh Acklin, an} E | appears, A few more Smart, tailored, single and double breasted suits in blue serge and tweed, materials. They are very smart rs $19.50 to $49.50. Nervopsness, sick headaches, insomnia are often the direct re- sult of constipation. Indeed, this terrible curse wrecks strength and health—and causes more than forty serious diseases. Yet it can be re- lieved—casily, promptly, perma- nently. It can be prevented! Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is guaran- teed to give relief. Doctors recommend ALL-BRAN because it is 100% bran or “bulk.” It relieves constipation m nature’s own way. Does a work no part- bran product can equal. 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