The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 22, 1930, Page 4

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a CHICAGO ennamenenenenrace ne te “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MARCH 2 19930. SOS coe : An Independent aig Newspaper THR STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Bxtablished 1873) } Bismarck Tribune by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. NEW YORK ited vely entitled to the use ‘tehes credited 2 aie this newspaper and al e published herein. All BOSTON 3 The Latest Nominee, Judge Parker . f the southern consideration apparently has prevailed y h President Hoover in the selection of a successor to t te John J. Parker, of North Carolina. late Justice Sanford in filling that death vacancy supreme court bench. At least he has picked rom the standpoint of the present distribution of the tice - \ 4 hate this selection was in order. New York has the yf justice, Hughes, and an associate justice, Harlan el Massachusetts has Brandeis and Holmes as as- justices; Utah hes Sutherland; Wyoming, Van- ter; Minnesota has Pierce Butler, and Tennessee ¢ Justice James MacReynolds. Mhis shows the supreme court rather lumped geograph- fly. As far as the North is concerned, it has all the sices except one. New England is amply represented ywo of the greatest juristic minds in the country. New te, in its capacity of an empire state, has that great 41 luminary, Chief Justice Hughes, and an associate felt to be of sufficient stature to have been yeted for the presiding post of the court, and by many Sected to receive the appointment that went to Hughes ‘the retirement of Taft; the West is amply represented Vandeventer and Sutherland; while the Northwest ¢ Butler, of the Twin Cities. Mais has left the South the sole representation of Mac- is some virture in constituting c tribunal like supreme court in part on geographic lines, other con- rations being equal. The South always has had ques- as of a diffrent character from those of the North 4} the West and New England to be determined. It ‘uld be proportionately represented on the supreme eh in consequence, that iis views can receive sym- i 4 ? ast Pe Alfication. ie bench nominee. ian't especially new. Criticisms along the same line ve been heard rather often in the last few years. 8 worth looking at if only for the reason that it rep- jemts so completely erroneous ® conception of what a ‘lege education ought to be. college, after all, is not primarily a place where a “ang man can be taught how to get ahead in life. Ex- for the technical and professional schools, it is not yatly concerned with the earning power of the people ‘sends out into the world. fs the process of living, rather than the process of and freer because of his college training. If that concept is wrong, then Harry Wetic and knowing consideration. The appointment © udge Parker conforms to such requirement. ) “he appointee is repnted to possess merit in legal His selection by President Hoover implies; #, His antecedents now will become the test of his eptability. A senate which hesitated and then bucked i ‘mst the appointment of Charles Evans Hughes surely * ‘wld be able to shed sufficient light on this newest minee to satisfy the country that the assumption of ‘ness is well placed, or that he is not at all fit to sit in| © 4 of the seats where perhaps epochal constitutional “erminations are to be pronounced. forth Carolina, in fact, may be springing some legal ils on the highest bench one of these days. With the nd atheism elsaimgaal ites aoreinivik : tay critical} Maybe they are loolzed upon as too far-fetched. 2e for determination by the supreme court might arise. snyhow, in view of the comparative obscurity of Judge \ sker there will be no disposition to captiously criticize | if it inquires the limit into the fitness of the Money Does Not Measure Education “Yamerican colleges are handing out too many degrees. tome 250,000 young people are graduated from colleges 4 universities this year. The college graduate is be- ming a drug on the market, and the day soon may me when a bachelor of arts degree won't be worth a + w of the fingers. But may become a millionaire or he may never in | Jong as a country is able to produce an exportable sur- Plus of a commodity, a duty on imports is a hopeless method of supporting the market.” That is worth thinking over. Incidentally, there are i" other American products besides oll to which it might | apply. The Tournament School days are ‘great days. are the play time. A splendid inspiration has taken this spirit of en- thusiasm, this period of playtime, and converted them into youthful epics such as the interscholastic sport corh- petitions, for the moulding of self-reliant character. An amazing influence for good has been found to operate through these. ‘09| This good has not only manifested itself among the teams but has extended itself to the public. Men who no longer play the physical sports of the gymnasium, the track or the field, find a sort of personal indentifica- So these big inter- scholastic events have become, as well, show days for the tion by proxy with the thrill of it. public. The state basketball tournament now in its closing day at the state industrial school at Mandan is one of these outstanding sport spectacles. This section of the state is glad to have it staged here and always has sup- ported it genezously. The incident of an unruly river this year interrupting access by highway to the tourna- ‘They are the period of life particularly endowed with happy enthusiasms. They Here Comes the Bride! (ME. COV MALIN SERIE £05 ANOELES: ©: and can cause pleasantness of. sion or delight. This is the ment merely revealed the loyalty of the two communities ly | rant ” to the event, when they exerted themselves to obtain aii “aceite pre geenttd pecriime w ee to have a sd special train service, that the usual large attendance flow of the attract the f ee : female. Among human should suffer no diminution. mouth and | beings, this seems to be reversed for This spirit of loyalty manifests itself in so many other aids @ lezy| although most men have a better ways. It is shown in the pride which leads the partic- sense of smell than most women, it Z apating communities to support and encourage their She —_ vate! a Ob ee ai = | perfume, home teams, Then it is exhibited in that greater sense of the| ‘There are two important. smells ‘ in which rivalries are submerged, in the chivalric com- and can|which are known as racial smells. vee mendation which the losers are able to extend to the pede aed fre ane cenng Pe from the wood hous victors. searing meat, hee be hype fp Miss A to be All these things meke for better manhood and better tthe body have & greater appeal to mn men at ol community brotherhood and for the upbuilding of that ail times than that of any other odor. clink larger community, the state, of which the competing is the less | Although man has invented eount- Th towns and cities are s0 many loyal units. sun oe pach, set as the ea ae [serve ———— $$ | tne territory. By revising the regis-/ea states upheld the constitutionality are follow the/he has failed to make anything Eee The Courtenay Mystery Today Is the || tration of voters and appointing elec- jot the Edmunds Act, the president of frail of the bos for many Dies, es) which will intensity his ability to this There was an unfortunate jump st conclusions in the ‘Anni f || tion otticers, the commissioners in/the Church of the Latter-Day Saints,| mating thelr teins aoe eee iwrevee’ Gan oer Boag gwilt Courtenay bank tragedy. Regarding the shooting of nniversary 0 1863 supervised an election of a terri-|commonly known as the Mormon| "rhe wet nosed animals, such as the | while undergoing a frei ond ‘ coer Elmer Bunkowske as the result of a bandit hold-up was torial delegate to Congress. Athough Church, issued @ manifesto declaring | Yog or cat, can recognize the direction | cleansing will notice my aber eresgpe cree etucpiniaythtenlueevnndigeihtey POLYGAMY ACT |12,000, were excluded from voting be-/he would urge the cessation of all/ rom which an odor comes, but before | newed senaitiveness with the cense of ence mystery if it were not a hold-up, but, for inst 1 On March 22, 1822, Congress passed jcause they practiced polygamy, the plural marriages and submit to the|s man can do as well he has to wet |smell, and I have seen » number of roo ystery ‘e not a hold-up, but, for instance, a local| the Edmunds Act excluding bigamists| Mormon delegate was elected over his|laws of the United States. The his finger in his mouth and then hold | patients who, before a fasting regimen siete crime. in the territory of Utah from voting|Gentile opponent by a vote of 23,000| Church indorsed this stand. it up and he can then tell that the| were entirely devold of this sense, eo With everybody thinking of the killing of Bunkowske|or holding office. to 4,000. o¢3t comes from the direction that | afterwards experience a great delight i as the work of a bandit, there would be no danger of the i ace betta edhe tomtpeed ry Following an important trial in The rose is the emblem of immor-| n)é finger is coldest. or in testmg on odor from another— pet real if the e was of home com appointed by the presid cont | which the supreme court of the Unit- ality to the Syrians. ‘The emotions are very closely re-| odors which are quite common and Th so. sconce unappreciated by most of us, $250 Sherlock Holmes would not have gone about the solu- > Vegheat tion in the way the Stutsman authorities did, He would @ Pale Complexion pears not have assumed to the exclusion of all other circum- Wea eae a E “1 80 much 80 that stences and possibilities that this was a bank hold-up. . one's first impression is that I am ill. fF In a mystery such as this all possible theories must : E 7 This condition has existed for the se eee ieasttras ailing Marowabon ai iNEA , . AUTHOR OF “THE AVENGING PARROT? furs tromsteaionnr asians oie: crime detector. Detectives can thus narrow down the by 5 : ‘ ge agree Abo ace ng iusaaiaflectekelnts1avile aoite vegeasiea Ener taba ©1930 by NEA SERVICE INC ANNE AUSTIN "ine Slack piston: ETC. fon fa red, but tn the course of only = detective was at once put on the crime. Here is a mur- become pale again.” eee der mystery that easily might grow to national interest Lagoteetll apaneonly doer rsied Answer: Some people have natur- and be used as the clothes-horse on which to hang a snappy movie mystery. Maybe this is a bandit murder. But it could be a jazz murder or a fool tragedy. Two other shootings with the elements of foolishness have cropped out on the heels of the killing of Bunkowske. + Above all it is a murder which should be solved and the perpetrator quickly brought to justice. The broad general rule is that the girl who looks most astonished when her Romeo finally proposes is the one who had it figured out a year ago what she would wear} at the church. A comedian says American jokes do not go in England. Truth is stranger than fiction. More than $76,000,000 worth of corsets were made last year. Seven days placed end to end reach too far to go without resting on at least one of them. A pessimist is an optimist who thought too much. | Editorial Comment | The Right to Kill Dispatch) (St. Pat The year 1929 was the worst Minnesota had ever known for fatal automobile accidents, There were 484 Persons killed in motor accidents last year, not includ- ing deaths from collisions between autos and trains. This ominously. ady nine persons have been killed in St. Paul by automobiles against only five at the similer stage of 1929. Minnesota is finding that it can not rely upon antiquated regulation of the in- creasingly hazardous traffic and come out whole. How can these casualty lists be kept down to less ter- rible proportions? What distance should the state go in requiring of automobile drivers a proof of their ability to avoid accidents and to make financial redress for any damage they may do? No one presumes to have the an- swer to these questions absolutely, but some states at year starts out Alret ut least are experimenting. The basis of almost every new system of traffic regula- tion that is being tried is the licensing or at least 1) life rise above a salary of $50 a week; either way, the ToReabieL Of strtvets, The fundamental. en now. soe its if the graduate’s life is richer, | Prevalent more progressive systems is that ipo cone tts Job only those should be.given the right to drive who arc if nae a any p | SERRRSIER tO do no. amfeky 10 chars pe: Poaam th ite salt does teach, it is that success in life does not} Twelve states, for example, have adopted in whole or all depend on the amount of money one is able to| Part the liability plan of the Binclair, | *0clation, which is now being considered by congress for *| the District of Columbia. This plan looks Ruth and Al Capone are more illustrious citizens first prevention of accidents and attacks the qi such a scientist as R. A. Millikan, for example, or irresponsil like Oliver Wendell Holmes, or a humanitarian} cur. It does not go so far as the compulsory p dane Addams. But if it is right—it there is some-|S7stem of Massachusetts, which is still in sap ATs ue laa ee | Automobile as- beyond uestion of ibility for such accidents as may oc- insurance | difficult to correct. You should be mineral elements. Also, use daily calisthenic exercises which will im- Prove your circulation. Massage of the face and application with hot water followed with ice may also be © ‘ + CLONINDAS en useful, Sint’ scerctary MES. EETITIA nanas constipating? Is tt ‘best ‘to " LAMBERT: CL MEN DA, Berke a scrape off all the fursy coating of Cres! Mortekied ati the banana, or is that just someone's with perfume 0; Answer: Bananas may be consid- ered slightly constipating as they do not contain much It is not NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XI — R. PRICE shook his white bead. “Sorry, Captain Strawn, but 1 can’t answer either of those ques tions now—definitely. Only an autopsy can tell whether the blow killed her or whether she was only stunned, and died by drowning. As to the time death took place, that will be hard to fix accurately, even after the autopsy, Unofficially, however, I'll say now that she has been dead between eight and nine hours—that opinion subject to re- vision, of course.” “Hmm... . That places the mur der between 11 o'clock and mid- night, if you're right—and you usually are. Good enough for a starter, at any rate... . By the way, Doc, in examining the body, did you find a letter or note?” “No—nothing of the sort. There's only one pocket—on the blouse of her uniform, and you can see for yourself it’s empty. I rolled the stockings down to look for bruises, and can assure you that no note was concealed in them. The stockings, by the way, have snags and runs in the back of them.” “Runs? Funny that a pretty girl like that—" the chief of the homicide squad began. “There were no runs in her stockings when Dick Berkeley was forcing her to dance with him last ight,” Dundee interrupted. “I distinctly remember noticing how Dretty ber legs were in their sheer black silk stockings, But 1 think I know what is responsible for those runs,” and he pointed to the rough edge of the flooring which extended slightly over the Sight of three narrow steps leading down into the lake, “See! Here's a tiny ““{'d be one of your frst arrests, Chief,” Dundee grinned. “My dinner coat’s recking with the stuff.” growing out of sudden anger, or) was pavic-stricken, but the instinct ; promised. “What about the floor, fear. The use of the perfume flask | for self-preservation was strong, | Doc?” as a weapon certainly points that y “I've already removed some of way—" The body mustn’t rise to the sur- the blood. pg erggrod pe face before he had a chance to es- bet the boards, where ‘How do you know {it was the cracks between 4 weapon?” Strawn objected. cape, as naturally as possible./the floor had been swabbed,” Dr. “Three reasons: first, your nose|Therefore it must be weighted.|Price assured him complacently. tells you that perfume has been|. . . Look!” and he drew Strawn} “Good\man!” Strawn applauded spilled here. Lots of it! Second,|to the top step and pointed.| generously. “Well, Dundee?” there's a glass splinter in that|“‘There’s where he got the stones.| 7.15 nearly all, I think. The crack between the boards. Third,”| Didn't even have to leave stones were then placed inside the and ho drew from his pocket the|steDs. | Stooped and gathered) ui ang it. was bound tightly handkerchief-wrapped stopper of|them in—three ay 6 viet about the girl's knees—" the crystal flask, “I found this un- ee of the steps, two from thal ih Olorinda Berkeley's arti” b: Paelacy chy overlooked by they Hey! Wait a minute!” Strawn Contals Strawn smelly oe: “But bow the devil did the per-|Protested. “How could the mur- aves the sentence fume flask get out here?” derer see to do all this, unless he 'e. ‘ had been thoughtful enough to| “Which doesn’t necessarily mean “It we knew the answer to that /provide himeelt with a fashlightt|that Clorinda Berkeley did. the question, 5 ABIAE deo replica,|{ happen to know there wasn't any |tying.” Dundee went on quietly. everything,’ Dundee rept 4.) moon last. night.” “Not that I'm saying she dida’t but in eetaiay Gbvicus thet nobody| “There again circumstances | We must me Me ap gg but a maniac would choose a erys-|Dlayed into the murderer's hand,”|!t¥ that ahr , ak neat tal flask of extremely concentrated | Dundee said. “No. moon, but iight |duite innocently fr & w perfume with which to clout any.) where it was needed. | There are ha rata Raia Rear aoe ore ene neta Tatentions, {|ameng the rocks, all along the leaving ber scarf bebind ber, thus mean. Therefore, 1 say the crime|'#ke's edge, at intervals—sufficient ber - ei ieereaain aiine: was impromptu, the weapon the|t? ght up the lake and the interior | Ser P F first and only one at hand. of the sel “Whether that assailant meant to] “I see... . Go on with your murder her or not we can't know yet, of course,” Dundee went on. thread of the stocking silk, caught |had hit ber thought she was dead,|"** yt : in a splinter. body was|or desperately feared the conse 0 Strawn Ae Fin, murder, I'm form, eh? Maybe she ” dragged to the ener" ane if she, ree ons conscious- oe She came out on |7OUF first arrests, Chiet,” Dundee “My dinner coat’s reek- ith the stuff.’ Kagan aba gaped at him Bad ed 1 don’t think she did,” Int happen to see this Dundee assured bim. “When| murder, did you?” “No, I wasn't an eyewitness, any it|more than I was the murderer,” assured him. “I should 66 AND whoever dumped the girl “you lke. the kid?” Straws. “Vv b! Dundes wered mueb!” Me faith the curtly. “But to get along 7 aa tines! ke The. eourderer | bas crime—and by the way, 1 tb’ was an impromptu, murde

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