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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis. marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. a : George D. Mann .. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year .......... eseerasaseneennes: 1.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) veers 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state, outside Bismarck) ... saneinhinns oy Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .. eoresnenseneees 9 1.00 2.50 Weekly by mail in state per year ......... Weekly by mail in state, three years fOr --.-wum Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, 1.50 r year ase ecsccerrsccensens 1 Weekly by mail in Canada per year ww 2.00 Member Audit Bureau of Circul Member of The Associated Vress The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also we local news of spontaneous vrigin published herein. rights of eye ee of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Ceo) 4 by rly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO * New YORK BOSTON The Big Parade Throughout the length and breadth of these United States the nation’s biggest parade is under way today. It is the march of voters to the polls in every state except Maine which held its final election earlier in the year. The hope of every good citizen is that the parade will be a big one; in other words, that the outpouring to the voting booths will be the largest in the history of the nation. ‘Always, there is someone to ask “What difference does one vote make?” and the answer might easily be “very little.” ‘ | ‘We need, however, to go further into the matter if we} are to determine the true significance of a ballot safely deposited in the box. 2 To begin with, the final result will be determined by one vote, multiplied by as many persons as take the trouble to go to the polls. The only integer in the voting problem is the unit. But more important still is the spirit of the nation as represented by ‘the number of citizens who take the trouble to make that journey to the polling places. A vote represents interest and watchfulness on the part of the citizen casting it; watchfulness of the affairs of his national, state and local political subdivision. Multiplied enough times, it means a citizenry which will not only vote to place candidates in places of trust and power but which will be watchful of their deeds and records while in office. And there is nothing so con- ducive to good government or so detrimental to bad gov- ernment as a watchful electorate. Many persons will contend that there is no direct and adequate way to express themselves through the bal- lot; that issues are confused, parties are jumbled and the good old days when one could abide by the party label, as represented by candidates selected at a convention, are no more. If this indictment of the American voter is true, more’s the pity. There is no denying the multiplicity and confusion of the issues. The disregard for party affiliation and tradi- tion is obvious, but these should not be a real stumbling block to a nation of citizens with sufficient ability to make the United States a world leader in all other lines. Recent reports indicate that the various branches of the government, federal, state and local, spend ap- proximately one-tenth of the nation’s total income. That means, boiled down to individual cases, one-tenth of the income of each citizen. In most cases that represents a sum of money sufficiently large to be of interest to the average voter. He would think about it seriousiy if the money actually were in his hands. There is no less reason for him to think about it when it comes to delegating the authority to someone else who will be charged by him and other citizens with spending it. If the voter thinks about the issues as they are pre- sented he will have little difficulty in making up his mind about both men and matters, for he can express, in the only direct way open to him, his personal preferences. That is what the fathers of this nation designed the ballot for. Essentially the vote is a weapon of seH- interest. Through its use the citizen can make an at- tempt to obtain for himself that kind of government and governmental policy which he considers best suited to his needs and which most nearly corresponds with his ideas. In this campaign we have, through the presentations of various candidates, such outstanding issues as the tariff, farm relief, prohibition, efficiency in government, unemployment, taxation and a host of less important matters, some of them national and some of them local. ‘What may appear important to one voter will weigh less heavily with another, but the sum total of those judgments, as represented by one ballot each, will deter- mine the election result and will have much to do with the destinies of the county, state and nation. Because of these things and because of the need of a vitalized, interested citizenship for the continued ad- vancement of America, it is to be hoped that today's parade to the polls will be a large one. The ‘Why’ of Gangsters Joe Aiello, late “big shot” in the Chicago gangs, is over- taken by his just desserts, long-overdue, and wins eight- column streamer headlines in the newspapers, a $15,000 “wake” and burial in an $11,000 casket; and with all of this pomp and circumstance attending his passing, that old question about notoriety and its attraction for the underworld comes to mind once more. Every so often we have to ask ourselves whether this accumulation of glory and honor—of a sort—is not, lumped together, one of the chief reasons for the gang- The gang recruits its members from among the underprivileged; from neighborhoods where ordinary law-abiding citizens are hard pressed for a bare existence, where the blare of great newspaper headlines seem to belong to creatures lifted far above the ster’s very existence. ranks of ordinary mankind. Isn't it possible, then, that this aura of greatness and wealth which surrounds gang leaders, in life and death, provides the best possible recruiting agent for the gang srmies? Isn't this one of the chief factors {n drawing} thousands of young men into the stews of the metro- politan underworlds? Very likely it is. And yet it is a great deal easier to put one’s finger on this factor than it is to find a way It is not simply a matter of sending missionaries into the slums to point out to the children of tenements that fame and wealth of the Alello sort do not, in the long run, prove very satisfactory. It is not simply a matter of closing our newspaper columns to the chronicles of gangland activities. The solution, probably, lies at an almost infinite depth, calls for an of making it inoperative. gimost infinite amount of work. What needs to be realized is that the gangster is not @ chance phenomenon, brought into existence by cheap movies, yellow journalism and ostentatious bootieggers. ‘You might come closer to it if you dipped into the Old Testament and said that the gangster was sent to punish us for our sins. He is, in fact, the product of our sins —the product of a whole tangled web of them. We tend to dismiss the bad side of city life too easily. We have been complacent about our great slums, about over-crowding, about the frightfulness of the struggle for existence that goes on there, about the whole slimy system that breeds corruption in police departments ana in courts and makes it possible for the criminal to ap- pear to stand on a higher pedestal than the law-abiding citizen. The gangster, in brief, is what he is because our New Yorks antl Chicagos are what they are. The newspaper headlines, the $11,000 caskets and all the rest are merely incidental. To get rid of the gangster we shall have to make a change from the ground up. Going Up The cost of hunting is going up. The average American's love for the outdoors, as ex- pressed through his desire to fish and hunt, is yeerly becoming more expensive, according to data prepared by the federal department of agriculture. In 1925-26, the various states sold 5,332,375 hunting and fishing licenses and collected $7,130,102; i: 1926-27 the figures were 5,989,795 and $8,187,223; in 1927-28 they were 6,462,555 and $9,338,173 and for 1928-29 they were 6,428,761 and $9,391,412. Thus, for the last year on which figures are evailable, we have a reduced number of participants but a slight increase in revenue. If this is the beginning of what the experts like to call 9 “trend,” the result will be dis- tressing to the American who feels that his right to fish and his pursuit of game are almost God-given. Continued long enough, hunting and fishing would become rich men’s sports and the cartoonist would be deprived of his favorite theme wherein he shows a fat gentleman with expensive tackle “skunked” while the barefoot boy with a tree-branch pole and bent-pin hvok goes home with the finnied prize. But in such case we would have far more sympathy for the barefoot boy than for the cartoonist. The aver- ! age citizen who is not too rich and who can still remem- ber himself as a barefoot boy probably would feel the same way. It will be a sad day for America when the barefoot boy fades out of the sports picture because hunting licenses have become too expensive for him to buy. * A Fifth of Our Earnings The tremendous increase in public expenditures in recent years menaces the national pocketbook. Fifteen years ago one-fourteenth of the national in- come was devoted to the purposes of government, To- day about one-seventh of our income is spent for these purposes. Public expenditures have been increasing at the rate of $500,000,000 a year and now total $13,000,000,- 000 annually, or more than $40,000,000 for each working lay. It is forecast that unless the people check govern- mental expenditures they will soon consume one-fifth of our national income. The tremendous amount of waste, incompetence and duplication of effort in governmental activities, is a burden on American prosperity. On the other hand, most of these expenditures of the government in all its branches, grow out of demands made by the people themselves, The main issue is not so much how much is spent as the value received for the expenditure. Doubtless the government could be more economically managed in many instances. The responsibility for ef- ficiency lies directly at the door of the men who write or approve the warrants. Indirectly, the responsibility for the expenditures and the manner in which they are made lies with the voters. Upon the manner in which they exercise their preroga- t've of casting the ballot and the intelligence they use in doing so depends the governmental well-being as viewed from the standpoint of those who pay the bills. Editorial Comment - Editorials printed below thought by other editors, on show aan Ree me hey are published with- out regard to whether th The Tribune's volicies, “"<” “#TC® OF disagree with Franco-Italian Rivalry (St. Paul Dispatch) There ‘are reasons of world importance behind the Present efforts of the United States in exerting all the diplomatic influence possible to bring about a naval agreement between Italy and France. The Franco-Italian rivalry has its roots so deep in the Political troubles of Europe that the United States, in pushing amity, is in effect undertaking to exert an in- fluence toward maintaining world peace. How deep- rooted and involved is this rivalry to which the United States has turned its attention can be gauged from the fact that Italy now has aligned with her all the Powers desiring a revision of the Versailles treaty, while France has negotiated alliances with Belgium, Poland, Jugoslavia, Rumania and Czechoslovakia, all sations which wish to keep the status quo. “Last ‘Saturday's marriage of Princess Giovanna of Italy to King Boris adds Bulgaria, another country anx- ious to upset the Versailles treaty, to the Italian lineup. ‘The others are Germany, Hungary and Russia. Thus the Franco-Italian rivalry can be regarded as the Euro- pean friction point, a spark from which would touch off the entire powder magazine. The United States is not pushing its efforts to secure amicable relations between Italy and France because of a fear that a war is immient, but rather because of its Policy that much of the’ world’s present ills are due to the burden of armaments and the economic, waste which they entail. . Saving China With Silver (Washington Star) President Chiang Kai-Shek of China has a unique Plan for solving the desperate Chinese economic situation and producing other millennial results in the revolution-' racked republic. It is proposed that this country should loan China 1,000,000,000 ounces of silver, worth some $34,000,000, for fifty years at two per cent. Judge Paul Linebarger of Washington, legal adviser to the Nanking government, has just arrived from China. He says he will ask congress to authorize the loan, the proceeds of which would be used exclusively for productive and constructive purposes. Much is to be said for the proposal, small as the pros- pect is that a country plunged in China's difficulties could hope to receive such a credit at this time. Judge Line- barger was asked when he stepped from the ship at San Francisco yesterday what sort of security China could offer. “Her national honor,” he replied, “would be the best security. In addition to that, China would pledge repayment on the basis of increased domestic revenues and from customs duties derived from revised tariff schedule.” Chinese respect for financial obligations is proverbial. But to what extent a national government seriously and chronically harassed by its foes could carry out its obligations is a question sure to be pondered care- fully before so immense a transaction could come within the realm of the debatable in this or any other country. China takes shrewd cognizance of the surplus silver situation in the United States. She suggest; that actual *| silver money, no longer necessary as a foundation for American currency, be melted into bars. These in turn would be shipped to China and there reconverted into coin of the realm. The next step would be to deal it out, through an American commission, in the form of wages to Chinese labor. Road building would be the first chan- nel into which this American silver stream would be poured. Farming and industry would benefit as trans- portation facilities were improved. The wherewithal for purchase of American goods would be brought into exis- tence, The specter of bolshevism, now hanging over the young republic, would steadily disappear, according to Judge Linebarger, paving the way to that economic and Political development from which China and the whole world would derive advantage. It is indeed @ silver lining which thus would be af- fixed to the cloud darkening China’s future. A year or two ago the American Red Cross, surveying conditions at first hand, disapproved the raising of a huge famine fund for China. Doubts were expressed as to how many American dollars would reach famine sufferers, com- pared to the number that would be diverted to the war lords. Would the tuchuns keep their hands cff an Ameri- a | can silver loan? RISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1930 ' HEREZ:TO YOUR HEALTH SYNOPSIS: Denny Dorn, Greenwich Village artist, is strangely “No, I got to get out of this house. WCE COY/ murdered in his home during a gay party. He is found hanging by ® |X didn't kill Dorn. Why do a Dr FRANTIC green portiere rope which aie Palner, newspaper man, Coe Les’ us iy ie male euTHoR sere PAST wey TO 1 suspected. coming from his er All the guests ar my the cellar suffering from a stroke which para- Carpenter is found ‘Did you hear any one aa up the steps a minute ago?” I lyges his power of speech before he can relate what happened. Detec- “There were several people in the tive Mtrphy has a small of cloth which he found clas) in |hallway, but t= Denny's hand. This will identify the murderer, Murphy heute. it tention to th : gant ice a disappears. The guests are in a state of hysteria as Murphy tells them they must stay in the house until the murder has been solved. Weird groans and heavy foot are heard coming from the cellar. Palmer = a Lael penny bes investigate. They can find no one in the cellar, but as they st go W a they see fl through the doorway. Palmer discovers strange footsteps on the cellar “Did they g¢ upstairs?” “I think they did. One of them was @ cop. I saw him through the lor.” “And the other person?” “I didn’t see who it was, I didn't care. It’s none of my business.” “It is some of your business,” I replied. “That r person who came up these stairs knows some- io = 4 oe rounder oe Denny mn. fact, I think that person killed him.” d his hands and Marino grippe: stared at me in a half stupor. He looked @ little crazy. His eyes were dilated and glassy. He didn’t gay a word. He just stared at me. “For heaven’s Sake, Marino,” said, “What has happened to you?” AND EXERCI HEART | authority as Sir William Arbuthnot Eas 3 THOU Lane says “a limited amount of ex- It does not matter very much what form of heart trouble is present. The dieting regimen seems to prove bene-| ficial whether one has leaky valves, angina pectoris, or rapid heart. I have seen thousands of presumably incur- able cases recover by following a sim- ple regimen. At the start of the treatment you should thoroughly cleanse the stom- ach and intestines of all food materi- als. This will not only og the gas “Nothing ta thing,” pressure, but will cause elimina- “Do you think & that anes miardered tion of much toxic material from the a a 1 couldn't tk bee body, a four or five days’ fruit nd “Oh, I ¢ 't prove ut ften proving beneficial. During the think” he ‘ows something about | fruit fast and about a month longer ‘Well, he don’t know # damned . “Not a damned Dr. McCoy will gladly answer prea: personal questions on health and By E. V. BURKHOLDER Se re ec, (Copyright, 1930, by New York Evening GRAPHIC) The front light of the cellar was almost directly above he step on which I saw the footprints. They were clear and more distinct than those on the chair in the kitchenette. A heavy cover of dust was on the step and every line of print was well defined. The strange part of the prints was the fact that I could not tell whether the person who made them had been going up or down the steps. They were almost oblong—the front was the same contour as the rear. They looked to me to have been made by a large foot—about a number eleven. I took the paper on which I hade - traced the footprints in the kitch- enette from my pocket. They meas- envelope for reply. ercise is beneficial to the injured heart.” ‘This plan of treatment explains in @ general way the methods I have used successfully in thousands of cases of supposedly incurable heart trouble. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS What Sleeping Position? cellar. I rushed upstairs to see if Question—M. S. asks: “Is it better thing!” he shouted. tired the same as those I had seen |the policeman had discovered the|thing! I tell you he don't know a | polson absorbed from the bowels. The |to sleep on the right side than the on the chair which the murderer | person who had been hiding in the | thing.” heart has less work to do during this | left, and why? to either put the hook above the door or to raise Dorn’s body up to hang him during that fatal minute. Answer.— Most people naturally sleep on the right side, which keeps them from crowding the heart. Start- cellar and who had been responsible for the shrill cry and the sound of the metallic click. His voice rose almost to a scream. I felt a little uncomfortable. I couldn’t understand the change that fasting period, so that the patient does not need to fear starting the fast be- cause he feels weak, as he invariably had com » but as - It was on the second step of the Soe oa fete nelieee beginning. Boones that 2 ia liiee feels stronger at the end of a shott| ing to sleep on the left side, they ba oh stairway that I saw these prints. I|of the first floor. He had just come |more than he had been telling. period without eating heavy foods, and|ally unconsciously turn on the bac looked on the first step. There| down the stairs. ‘Why had Mona and Marino come __| the heart will be able to function more |or right side during the night. The were none there. I followed the steps to the top of the stairway, but saw no other traces of this strani to this floor, where Denny’s dead body lay? What had he discovered to_upseé him £0? best position for sleeping is to lie partly on the right side with the knees drawn slightly up, the face and “That person disappeared into thin air,” he said. “There was no trace of any one in the hallways when I efficiently. Following the fast the diet should be well regulated both as to quality and and almost inht looking - red. Just print. Soest ; eg en ee Denny ‘ay dead, Why had Mating quantity of food. Three small meals a| shoulder fitted snugly into the pil- That was not difficult to under-} 1 asked, left the studio? He said it made | day should be used, keeping the quan-|low, and the right arm brought stand. Daily use had erased any dust from the centers. It was only along the edges that the dust lay straight down and back of the body. tity of food to the minimum of the In this position the circulation of the “There’s one bird in the library|him nervous. Then why had be body’s requirements. All foods which tai come downstairs? Denny's body was upstairs and the rest of them are in | CoM 2 Onoer My fi crawinds 3 I tied to recall just, what the | Dasement and on the first floor?” | | “without another word, and with- | ¢t¢., should be avolded, and for some agg ggg foot of the person who disappeared | ;1:5 hallway floor when I got out of | out giving me a@ chance to answer time it is better to eliminate all sugars} Question—Mrs. W. M. asks: “What ot oe PE Se ance acemnes him, he arose to his feet and walked | and heavy starch foods. would you suggest as refreshments the cellar. I didn’t stop to look in the basement rooms.” “Who was walking up here?” “I don’t know. They were gone when I got here.” “Did they go, up the stairs?” “If they did, they went too fast for me.” before looked like. been too fleeting to remember thing. had ‘any- out of the room, m tumb! some- thing to himself. He went up the stairs to the studio and I followed. ,_anside the studio I saw every one sitting around the room staring at each other, They were all there. Jane Marsh was as pale as death and sat close to Cot Devore was on thi for a social gathering? I am familiar with your rules of diet, being a faith- ful reader of your articles, and, since I am desirous of conforming to your Tules on this occasion, I would greatly appreciate your advice.” Answer.—One of the simplest re- freshments is a good-sized glass of In some cases the fruit juice fast may be followed by a milk diet, as this seems to allay the inflammation which may be present in the intestinal tract and in this way reduces the flatulent tendency. I do not advise staying in bed except in the most acute forms of heart trouble. Carefully regulated ex- It suddenly occurred to me that that person had been hiding in the “They could have easily got up- e couch: and Lor- Colne! while’ ae man and I|stairs by the time you got to the|etta Whipple was at her side. Greta te at had been down there. I walked |{first floor,” 1 sald, © Eilts wae raiiliiars we euisrptanar ay. | tcciee Cat be! Wael SE) Ose Saree Ries | St Oe cumie be eri nee toe refreshing and may be used if not too close to mealtime. Or give your guests @ liberal choice of all of the fruits this fasting treatment, and is really necessary for treating any form of heart derangement. The exercise back in the cellar. I saw at once that this m person had ster! “I guess they could. Anyway I ‘apparently hidden under the stair- didn’t find any one. “I guess you're convinced there occurred to me that she always sat at the piano and I wondered why. It wasn’t long until I learned the way. There was some old wood and | was some one down there, anyway.” |reason. It was g good reason, all should consist of calisthenics taken/|in season. lumber there, which gave a fair/I laughed nervously. right; but a little stupid. Brandford mostly in the horizontal position Cause of Headache’ hiding place. “Yep, there was, all right, but|was sprawled out in the chair he while lying on the floor. In addition] Question—Mrs. H. writes: “I have i, An examination of the floor pro- | what were they doing down there?” | had occupied when the lights went to these exercises, walks should be|very bad headaches which my doctor duced no footprints. The cement} “That’s what I'd like to know.” out. Dr. Gray was standing near taki ch Of course, with both | tells me are caused by the large ar- did not retain prints easily, despite/ “Maybe we'll find out before the | the kitchenette door. an each day. , f heart to the fact there was some dust on it.|night’s over. I'm going back to| Marino entered the room just | exercises and walks it is very impor- tery leading from my hea my I looked around again, | watch the old man. Riurphy told me | ahead of me. He walked over and tant to begin gradually and increase | head having lime in it. Can you ad- wondering what pt could have] ‘The policeman walked into the|sat down. I took a seat near the the amount slowly so as not to strain | vise me what to do?” brought any one down there. I|sick room and I went upstairs. Ma-|piano—the stool Loretta Whipple the heart. You should always rest if} Answer.—You doubtless have hard- could not see how the cellar could|rino was the person the policeman |had sat on when she turned the you feel the heart begin to pound, or |ening of the arteries, which can be be associated in any way with the|had seen in the library. He was | lights out. ice any indications of overwork. |at least partially cured by living on a murder of Denny Dorn; yet twolalone and one glance at his face| The tenseness in the room was so | 7°! aA ih antha teat ful diet which is comparatively pees eee qo en ne a ‘i rs ger sot re] ban poeta Cts Ta ‘tint bot Hi epithe of munete and free! from all grain foods. You should \ rst Was n|pened to . was pale ant ig @ play. even e face of Henry iter. What had | nervous. like any other muscle in the body it | use large quantities of fruit, especially the acid fruits. The action of these fruits in the body helps to dissolve the calcium deposits which form in the tissues of the arteries. nod_ to any one. “Go on ahead with your little act,” Brandford drawled. He was still drunk, but his speech seemed to have improved a littic. I US. he seen just before the “What's the matter, Marino?” I come over him? It must have been | said. something terrifying and horrible.| “Nothing—not a damned thing,” Consciousness of a coming stroke he snapped back at me. can be strengthened by properly reg: ulated exercise. Many doctors will tel you that no exercise should be take! with heart trouble, but as great Es a | Today Is the | ‘Anniversary of RODIN’S BIRTH BB SO — ‘WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 ga ree Meters On Nov. 4, 1840, Auguste Rodin, a fit ited 4 er report. French sculptor, and, one of the) 7:i5—iarm reporter. in greatest of all times, was born in 7:30—Special bulletins: Paris of a family, : ment of agriculture. ® school maintained by his uncle in| 9:00—Sunshine hour. a Beauvais. At 14 he entered a school |10:00—Opening grain markets; weath- for decorative art in Paris and later, 10:10—Aunt Sammy. nal :57—Arlington time signals, 2 rgan program: Clara Morris. works to attract attention was a head 12:00—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- called the “Broken Nose.” Though he modeled this at 22, critics regard it as one of the most powerful of his ‘Washington. J, S. depart- eon program, i—Voice of the Wheat Pool. (0—Music. {30—Musical matinee melodies. 1:45—Grain markets: high, low, and close; Bismarck Tribune news, ‘weather, and St. Paul livestock 2:00—Siesta hour: Good News radio magazine, 3:00—Music. 00—Stocks and bonds. Bismarck Tribune sports items. “i une news and weather; lunch- P< ‘After service in the army in the Franco-Prussian War, Rodin gained considerable attention hy his statue the “Age of Bronze.” He later re- ceived the commission for the bronze door of the Museum of Decorative a eg news. Arts, The door was never finished! ¢:00—Your dinner hour. but the figures and a4 Rodin pre- Se cmenrosiing and newsacting. ‘ é “ pared for it are among his best works. | 7:0—Stu pa as am tac fll; ; i} Among them are “The Thinker” and age ig A ala : uy “Adam and Eve.” 8:00—Studio program. “Rodin’s art,” wrote a critic, “is the} g__ len culmination of the naturalistic sculp- ture of the nineteenth century, and 4 Mandan Shorts | yet in knowledge of anatomy and pro- ¢ “7 dign’s kil P ino shrieke: a2. found mastery of technique he stands} Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Means motored ‘I didn’t kill Dorn, I tell you!” Marino shrieked a Pe re i a ee would never have produced that look} “You look like you had seen a) looked around the room. Every one Mr, and Mrs. L. J. Gasper, former in a person. Then there was his un- host or something like it,” I said |,was at Dr. Gray. I had no & closely.” ig Tues what fad bappencd finished sentence, The— | eyeing him closely. sj ie if BARBS | ti e——" “sure, go, ahead, Doc, Loretta |, __6| _ Miss Helen Haider ye thle Whipple said. “Tell ‘us who moved week for Beulah to assume her duties rom our chairs during the time the | There's a rumor that the Prince of 2-'-, shier in the offices of the North brought on his stroke of apoplexy? You might be able Wales will marry Princess Ingrid of - |“This whole thing is getting on my ‘. iv no al ae matches are made there. Hon. Henry Osrpenter See |nerves. I am leaving here before | S® Loretta, Whipple's eee age Snes Net akanday for something: and as he lay on his bed. = ve her home in St. Louis, Mo., after Frith his eyes wide open and olead: |10ne.” a our friend M ne seat surprising thing about spending the last six months visiting voice silenced. r wait until our friend Mur- killed Dorn, said. ie ping the secret of the murder of Denny | phy comes back." 1 said, “He might |Paggnued Dor" be SAM. cmoved is that the stock market didn’t col-| Touts f Ses pe, ae Dorn, me had tried to tell us some- mal it uncomfortable if you beat|from your seats the moment that lapse on account of it. ze & (are es eae ae eae BEL Te sais. coe ahold starptgh (eee ne ee * * * About 70 girls at the State Train- the stairway connected with whkitne Marino fairly shouted tome. “I| A’ cold. hard laugh came from Of ‘all oe are binge ing school attended a Halloween cos- had seen? They we very | didn’t kill Dorn—I tell you I didn’t | Courtney. “Some more of your Sher- |football, perhaps the m tume and stunt party held at the closely with the murder of Dorn. | kill him.” \ Holtnes stuff,” he sneered. “You. |takes place at Cambirdge, where it is| school Friday evening under the di- ‘That much was certain. I had seen| “Who said you did?” I said. stick to facts. This is no reported Harvard invites her oppo-| rection of the teachers and officials. them on that chair in the kitchen-| That rather quieted him down, but | child’s play.” nents to tea after games. ig elig ette. There was no question but that |the great change that had come over| “No, it isn’t,” Doc laughed. “Don’t aay Mrs. Morgan Morris was hostess at they were the same. You could not | him startled me. His eves were wild| worry, I'l stick to facts. I'l first t contest at the Uni a bridge party i mistake them. They were too odd| not to leave that room. He thinks |show you, Mr. Courtney. that YOU In a recent cont adh ver= evening in looking for that. the old man may talk any time.” moved your when the sity of Kansas, the “most perfect lov-| com! to Mrs. Jennie Wold, ' What kind of a foot could make |and his lips twitched with a jerky | lights were out and vou started for ers” on the campus were chosen. You | Seattle, who is in Mandan for a visit such @ print? Certainly not a nor- | movement. the door of this kitchenette!’ might think they would keep a thing| With her sister, Mrs. Sig Ravnos. mal shoe or foot. The person| “Where is Mona?” I asked. _ like this in the dark. Honors in the games were held by PiRne have. are Pirpowte se 13 a8 Gea’ gee said. roan vig hy fia Comrtney ie. his xk * Mrs. Wolf and Miss Jessie Norman. ‘upstairs a le while ago. I went up| actions‘ detective mistaken any kind of slipper I had ever |with her. but that damned room gets| in his icions? Read the next From comes the infor- Leningrad mation that the average duration of life has increased 10 years for the male and 13 for the female. But maybe it just seems that lomg. > —_——_ “The great costs of the way are now , Quotations VRE ie ot being realized.”—Senator William E. on my nerves.” installment of this thriling murder ‘Take a drink. That'll help you.” is own. I didn’t linger long down in the tomorrow’s paper. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: - / @|cents for children, A free number | state, the Baldwin school will ob- cn a valuable prize will be given with serve the day with appropriate exer- a | Baldwin School Notes | every admission ticket. cises. The upper grades are prepar- The upper grades have been busy |ing compositions on the life of this Mabel Anderson and Lillian Gehrke | most of the week, writing review | {famous Arctic flyer. have had perfect spelling for the | tests in the various studies for the We all envy Norman Fricke his month of October. second month of school. ability to draw and paint. He may Friday, November 7 having been | become a famous cartoonist. The following pupils have been Bor: neither absent Le He during the | proclaimed a Memorial day for Carl} ‘The art classes have finished some ia eee - month of October: Hazel and Rich- | Ben Eielson in all the schools of the | water color work on flower drawings.| «wy cant work with my coat on.”— ard Anderson, Norman Fricke, De- ‘The Buchholtz children have missed Henry Ford, most of the week in school on account of moving to the country. 33 Animals Burned. In Cleveland Fire ‘Thirty-three head of animals, in- cluding eight horses and 11 milk cows, died in a barn fire on the farm of Robert Fisher, five miles notheast of Cleveland, Sunday night, according to the Northern Horse Exchange and Rendering company here. Officials of the Bismarck firm did not know how the fire started but said the animals were insured. ‘The rendering company will send eight trucks to the Fisher farm to lores Gehrke, Robert and William Gehrke, Jeryl Haibeck, Laurena Belle Lenihan, Doris, George, Susan and Mary Poole. Mrs. Haibeck and children spent the week-end in Baldwin. The school observed Monday, Oc- tober 27, as Navy day and Roosevelt's birthday. Hazel Anderson, Doris and Elda Hogue visited their teacher on Sat- urday evening. See HEBE JEBE at the Baldwin schoolhouse! Friday, © November seventh at 8 o'clock p. m. Bring the children and have an evening of fun. Fun for everybody. Fortune telling, fish pond, free program and music. Hot lunches. A fine quality Esmond blanket will be given away. Admis- ** * 2 “I don’t like airplane stumting.”—' Thomas A Beate * * “From the looks of the campus in the early fall and spring, it would appear that the high schools have presented a very effective course of study entitled “neckinology” or “the art of public lovemaking.”—G. Robert Smith, dean of freshmen, Uniwersity of Dlinois. see “There is nothing @ polit ; hates more than losing votes.” — Broun. /"Stickler Solution | — ** * “Death is but an incident of life and not a termination of it.\— Sir] You can put up a brave line when sion tickets, 15 cents for adults; 10 move the carcasses here. Oliver Lodge. \ you're on the right end of it ( -<-~-