The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1933, Page 4

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, Bismarck Tribune |*==« and bring order out of chaos | fa tne Herp [2 cuetne Se ey oy or { : “NEWSPAPER To the terms of plutocracy, demoe- | (Established 1873) Tacy, aristocracy and theocracy, has “Published by The Buxmarck Tribune [come this new intruder, Cempany, Bismarck, N. D, and en-' The press teems with disc: * tered at the postoffice at Bismarck a8!tne new cult. Courses of lec Second clas mail matter. jbeing offered in technocrac PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE: By William Brady, M. D. personal health and hygiene, not to disease ‘be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, | presigent ‘and Publisher. ‘since the days of Fietcher ‘has the public been Subscription Rates Payable in |The chloroform the did not draw as much carrier, per year........$7.20 Daly id mail per year (in Bis- public as has technoc MACK) 20.20... .2eeeceeeeeee TIO} Coue and Osler were Pctslde Bimmrek) sre $00 |B ia their pre Daily by mail outside of North —_ | technoc: Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 They Weekly by mail in sate, three 6 North ’ COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF i COUGHS Years ago, George Be. Weekly by mail outside Dakota, per year ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation per entitled to the use for republication isay * of all news dispatc! credited to OF not otherwise credited matter herein are Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER a ed) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON .»,. ing tax col the public 5 the scale ai ty probably a: anywhere else entists are re- to appiy. It is to exercise the v most care in making appropriations’ 0 that th the in- come. It task, a probably will be a thankless o: all is said and done, 6) which must be ac situation is to be me’ your ad- instructions ished if the} ‘ weeks we're going several kinds of enough, be advisable to do It probably would be a better! plan to in those features of our) Present set-up which rm neces-| e and which and let the remainder Discrimination and a sense of cough and this If you have no keep your subscrip- | Min advance and Suggest something ing in the way of Anyway there are,, n varieties of cough esires to get off his me general re- 0 do about your own and. You'll learn © spring comes. ND ANSWERS Wheat to People? opinion of cracked Even we can see, gling business ev a necessary to do + the legislature has for it. The task req’ painstaking study and close at to Getails of the state fiscal or job well and S job cut out fair thar can force a anizas ; ne hope of ol ¢ part of the dit H tion. I: cannot be accomplished |" t one ae 7 Peet ese eee yy on @ broad and sweeping! "Hen. at the same tim os : y ad a ‘Ping ot the creditor are ‘{ you mean some propri: product, I think it is un-! to buy it even for your! table. There is no good rea- ; plain wheat, just as it comes! the threshing machine, should | be used as the main part of the, of any man, woman or child.} or crush or grind it if you/ Cook it as you please. Sup-! it with fresh milk, eggs.! » fruits, and you have the ideal | (“string along” with the bus view the situation ld be encouraged at we are among the to face this dis. ‘wrong on the farm ing, Ni akova been as well orgar Payers have forked over their mon- ey as willingly as those of any other state. | _ Beginning with the Sorlie admin-) | Biblical. Question ‘rect | wil us injustice | istration the state began the accumu-! | { Jation of enough money in its gen-| s eral fund to pay in cash. This fund! i § reached almost a million dollars be-| HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Puzale “Civil War." | eto are 1 Shock 2 15 Spigot. fore the downward curve se It} alarin 18 Whom a . id has carried North Dakota alon this | 70ne who Jacob sup- far without serious difficulty. | salutes, plant? (Bib.), But the accumulated fat has dis-}| 13 Epilepsy To bevel out. symptom. appeared and the state can no lon er | live off of it. It must now do some-/| thing else and, since selling state| Pertaining to motion. Front leg. 14 Pulpit block. 16 Song for one voice. 25 Made of oak, bonds is practically an impossibility. 17 Ingenuous, 27 Organ secret there is only one answer, 19 Fashion." ing bile. 20 Parallelogram. 28 Bisnch f Technicians 21 Writing table 2 sculptor. ele esta plate was 3 Pedal ex- 2 eer passed recently at a meeting of an 4, Seeauttles. , i Dect “advanced” religious cult in New 26 Brad. 47 Metallic Aviation 34To hasten. York, one woman dropped in a slip) 23To bellow. —_,, slement. ehoals 29 Subsided. of paper by which she offered to give, 29 Hour. . i City in Irish 40 Nobleman. & certain amount of Kilowatt energy 20 Japanese fish, 7 51" M0 Ir 43 Discharged, 32 Soldier's suit. 45 To lift up. to further the cause under iseus- | Sa Barby. 47 Torrid ——? sion. | 35 Gumbo. : 48 By. | It was the first “technocratic dol-, 36 To elude 56 sennny cake. 56 Shoe. . ad lar” on record. | 37 Bees’ home, oh th Mountain pass | , Who had been dis-/ 38 Born. smiths’ re Aye. | The lecturer, 29 Untruitful 61 Blacksmiths’ gti er toy guide. 53 Bucket. | Bee ROCACY. BAY OF MAY DOLL Gs aaaty sal. Mame 1070 blow hob ines | have preferred legal tender to the} 42 Within, 62 Church cap. horn 56 Postcript. “electric” dollar, but he became ex-; 43 Tnbiased. VERTICAL 11 Tree Southeast. cited and rushed to the newspapers, 1 Near what city 12 Great leader i Third note, showing elation over the manner in is the U. S. American GY Minor note. “His job then was to reduce communicant’s offer of energy to the ia g E E Hl i * our footsteps resounding down the CHAPTER XXXVIII. THINK the Geraldine Foster I case really began to be solved that night. More, I think the first glimmer of the final solution came to Thatcher Colt as, an hour after dinner, we left Police Head- quarters, and walked down the vaulted pasage-way, the echo of range of pillared arches. I knew that Thatcher Colt’s mind was still busy arranging a conspectus of the various puzzling features in the case, as we entered the department car and Neil Me Mahon received a orief instruction where to take us. “So far as the public is con- cerned,” said Colt, suddenly break-! ing silence, “Dougherty has a more convincing case than ever. He san emell Dr. Maskell burning in the electric chair. The victim—a girl, the standard bearer of Ameri- can womanhood, fighting to save herhonor. The accused—the pam- pered con of a very wealthy man, a bees seunices of dollars. ‘his is Dougherty’s opportunity to be Governor of New York. He will pawn his soul to prove Maskell guilty. What a bonne bouche it would be for the reporters, if they knew what we were up to—they would scream in headlines that Dougherty and I were in a death atruggle for political honors. Not one reporter would be willing to believe that the only motive in the mind of the Police Commissioner was to see justice done.” And, after a moment, he added, | W with a chuekle: “Yet I took the trouble to ask Dr. Maskell for the name of his barber! And he did not even thank me!” I Strange By-Ways | By this time we had reached the outlying frontiers of Greenwich Village. At the place where Fourth St. crosses Seventh Ave. in the drunken criss-cross of the} Village highways, we left the car and proceeded on foot. The Com-} missioner led half way down the block to a thick round pole, paint- ed with red and white stripes, ani surmounted by the blue globe of an electric light—the signpost of a basement barber shop. We de- scended and found the shop de- serted of customers. The barber, a diminutive Italian with black curls, volcanic eyes and an imper- tinent black mustache, was reading an account of Doctor Maskell’s arrest in the New York Evening Graphic. Calmly, Thatcher Colt sat down in the and asked for a hair trim and shave while I slouched in a chair and fingered a copy of Liberty magazine. ea “Good evening!” said the bar-| ber, adjusting a cloth around the neck of the Police oo ner. “It is a very nice night. This mone Thatcher Colt con- seded with affable good nature. Encouraged by his friendly cus- tomer, Marinelli, the Glug are so many of his tribe, became talk- ative, and launched into a bitter denunciation of the new traffic system, never dreaming that its author lay just beneath his razor. JANUARY 18, 1932 Of two or three meals every day for a Answer—117 calories in each ounce, | Month or longer. Of course insulin before or after popping. In other| must be administered by | Words, it is the equivalent of oatmeal | injection and it can be bread. Insulin for Gaining Weight NTHONY A Copvnsertr BY Covict, FRIEDE, (NC, — DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC “So the women followed the doctor into this vé place!” ex- claimed the Police Commissioner. “One did. She just wanted to be near him—she admitted it.” Who could woman have been? The same mysterious crea- jture the doctor had found at his office door? The one who had! telephoned him through Mrs. Wes- tock and summoned him to the {house on Peddler’s Road? “What excuse did she have for coming in to your shop—was she here for a manicure?” asked Colt, “Yes, but that was a bluff—she liked the doctor.” “Pretty girl?” asked the Com- ‘ioner carelessly. t so young—very pretty— onde hair, nice shape, not so barber. sweet voic: bad,” chortled the Just a married woman ting—just a married a yearning, devouring, ah! terrific passion trong, good-looking man. She said she did not even know his ne. But she confessed her feel- ing to me.” “And you took pity on her?” s—I gave her a lock of his , after he went out.” The Commissioner laughed. No one could have guessed from his attitude, that now the hunter iffed a scent—I lit a cigar ette to hide my own deep excite- she come here often?” arber shook his head. she never came back. hy? You are not that silly lady’s husband?” He drew back. With the natural dramatic instinct of his race he was ready to make a tragedy out of conversation he got into. “No,” said Thatcher Colt. “But Iam a friend of Doctor Maskell. | l_am one of the few men in the city today who believes. him inno- cent apa on a lady wore a wedding ring. What did it look like?” The barber's liquid eyes turned upward in turmoil. T and two big pearls.” “Thanks.” The barber shrugged his shoul- he ring,” he said atlast, “was! qjof platinum—set with diamonds— successfully and rather more nutritious than/Used for this purpose only by the or under his personal di- We are making some prog- physician { rection. BB “Has your little boy gone to bed?” “What's he been doin’?” “Nothing. I want to talk with ae I want to reward him, in “Oh, yeh? And who are you?” “I'm from the Police,” said Thatcher Colt, in his friendliest voice. “I talked with your young man for a few minutes the other day, and I took his name and ad- dress, and now I want to talk with im again.” The woman kicked the door with her foot, but Colt was too ick for her and his foot was out in time to stop it from closing. “Now, Mrs. Planzen, you are not in any trouble. It happens that your little boy plays near Ped- dler’s Road and I am hoping he can help me in a very important case. T__ Anxious To Talk] “Oh, gee, mom, lemme talk to him!” and there came under the mother’s elbow the same sallow. faced, buck-toothed urchin whe ran from me that cold day when Betty Canfield and I first came upon the house on Peddler’s Road. “Hello, Warren,” said the Com- missioner, who never f¢ a name once he has heard it. “You remember me?” “Sure.” Turning to his pleaded: , “Aw, let him come in, mom. They're cops, but they don’t care nothing about the applejack in our kitchen. They’re just Tam- many Hall guys.” We did our best to keep a straight face, as Mrs. Planzen said? “Any reward that would go te my child comes to his mother what needs it to keep soul and body together—and not to his father who drinks up every cent that he lays his hands on.” “Exactly,” agreed Thatcher Colt, and presently we were admitted into the shabby little living room “Now, Warren,” he said, “be- fore I went inside the house that other day, you told me a wild story about a ghost without any clothes mother, he~ ( der: hampoo? Massage?” hateher Colt, who remained silent while the final touches were given his face and hair, had one question held in reserve. He put it casually, as he rose from the chair. a Pawn. ! “Would you know that woman if you saw her in?” he asked. The barber looked at the Com- missioner’s face and for the first time really recognized him. “Mother of God!” he whispered. “The Commissioner’ “Could you identify that woman, Marinelli?” “Yes—yes.” “And you can keep your mouth shut?” “Ah—I am a man of few words, Mr. Commissioner!” ; | We emerged into the darkness| of the street. Police Commissioner, by ae and other sounds, continued to agree with him through the lather. But at the first opportun-; ity, Colt managed to defend his 1 ice by pointing to the efficiency | the department in clearing up/ urder, ee AR raid the’ barber, “but that | is too very sad.” “Sad? How so?” “That Doctor Maskell. He is one} of my best customers. He come! here often. He is one fine man. But he is cursed by charm. He is too damn attractive to the girls.” Thatcher Colt nodded under the lifted blade. | “It's a great way to be cursed) sometimes,” he jested. s “No. It was the doctor’s ruin. Poor doctor. The women followed | ” him.’ “Followed him?” _ “Yes, yes. Even into my shop “Now,” ‘said Thatcher Colt, a few minutes later, when we were again in the car and driving up- town, “it is becoming more and more epparent that the killer had no real grudge against Geraldine ‘oster. That poor girl was merely @ pawn to be sacrificed in a larger game, in which millions were ,in- volved, All the evidence planted against the doctor is leading to that conclusion. Imagine collect- ing the doctor’s hair cuttings, just to fake the refuse under the dead girl's finger nails.” We came to a halt in front of a walk-up &partment on upper Broadway, not far from the scene of the crime. Thatcher Colt calm- ly mounted four flights of steps and rapped on the door. A woman, in her nightgown, just about to go to bed, and with a baby feeding at her left ‘breast, opened the door and stared at us with dull they followed him’ : T bent low over the magazine 1 pretended to read. SID GIVE $5 TO Know, iF MABEL,GOT TO: ir $0 GLAD 70, KNOW “RIGHT MABEL. CALL US UP THURSDAY "$0 WE'LL KNOW WHEN YOU'RE COMING uy LONG DISTANCE ADVENTURES OF THE BRIGHT FAMILY >: PESIUTGREL, Sao Wf nenav! now can 5 YOU. JOKE! WHEN, rm, $0 WORRIED? resentment. “Mrs. Planzen?” “Yeh” in the murder house.” “Yes, sir.” “What made you say that?” “T saw it.” “You saw the naked ghost?” “Yes, gir.” “Where?” “Inside the house.” “Where were you?” “I was inside the house, too.” “When was that 2 ‘istmas Eve.” raul it were you doing up The boy turned first red and then white and hung his head. “You don’t remember,” said Mrs. Planzen, who was distrustful of police honor. “It’s all right,” the Commis. sioner told him. “I am not going to harm you.” “I broke in the house,” con- fessed the boy. “But I didn’t mean to steal anything. I was just play- ing robber’s cave.” “Anybody with you?” “No, sir.” “Did you break the window?” “No, sir. That was broke a long time ago.” “Did anybody find you in there?” “No sir—not right off. It was awful quiet. I was pretty cold. 1 Sayed an the fae for orate Trying to get up the nerve to light the gas stove. Then I he: a noise and I got awful scared, and I was ashamed of that, and finall just to prove to mysélf that wasn’t- scared at all, I sneaked up ett I could hardly ns way, and I walked on my toes. When I got upstate 1 was still more scared—I don’t know why, but I was sure there was somebody up there—I was afraid to go up- stairs or down, either—so I jumped to the window in the hall and climbed out on the window sill. I let myself down by my hands when | I saw it coming down the hall.” (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) 4 my IN WHAT CITY 15 THE TALLEST BUILDING IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE 9 of, Bismarck the | Member of The Order of the GoldenRuleis ~ SERN Steice Service for ALL. regardles; eter eeumtionces e HONE 304 Use the Want Ads “et” RICHHOLT'S “ssr° SAY phe PRICES 'e iver SALMON; Fancy red; 1 Ib. tins ......17¢ PURE PRESERVES [neque ne... 59¢ ROLLED OATS Seem ”.......10¢ PANCAKE FLOUR, 3! pounds ....19¢ CAKE FLOUR, large pkg., 234 Ibs. .-18¢ PURE VANILLA, 2 0z. bottle ....:..19¢ Barr's, No. 215 tim VEGETABLE DINNER BLOCK SALT .....................8 OYSTER SHELLS, 100 Ib. bag ....$1.25 Green Vegetables Always Fresh ORANGES LEMONS APPLES 1 DOZ. 6 LBS. 3 Doz. ; 65c 35e Phone 631 Meat Department Phone 631 Fancy Fresh Dressed eS per Ib. 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