The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 13, 1922, Page 4

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G THE BISMARCK TRIBUN. eo = THE B BISMARCK TRIBUNE| Entered at the Postoffiee, Bismarck, No D., as D. as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D, MANN” - - E e Editor Foreign Representatives watch ‘the horizon to know when the tail end of the tornado is in sight. ) It takes two months for price movements to travel to us from the Orient. SATURDAY, MAY 13, '1922 WHISTLER IMMORTALIZED MOTHER IN PAINTING judge Who would cate for such an @ stract if it-cost him a part of his sal- ary. He would then discover that in case of a dispute it is quite an easy matter to refer to the original record. | Twice a year for about six months lat a time the ‘business of the court is held up to await the recurrence HER AS AN IDEAL “G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ea ort DISCOVERY | ét court terms. When tho term com- PAYNE, BURNS AND ean Kecceis ‘and isolated in Moscow by Dr.'N. Kritch. Con- after case. As a rule, the judges ale NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave, Ble. A RONEN e AN mute and‘ hear talk for an hour by firmation comes from Davenport, medical head of couns2l for each party. ‘When the time MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication’ of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year........ Ss 7 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bis Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) seo MOTHER Affection for mother is an instinct. Reverence for mother is something that civilization has given us. It is easily the finest of man’s finer sensibilities. A man’s mother is his one ideal that nothing can destroy. Equally indestructible is a mother’s love for son or daughter. The person never lived who, at the clase of life, did not look back and recognize his mother as his greatest friend. Mother love symbolizes cternity and the soul. It is the foundation of our civilization, the force that gradually elevates us to higher ideals and achievements. Life. would be futile and discouraging if its the American relief expedition in Russia, The next step will be development of a vaccine or curative serum. That should be a matter of only a short time. Then typhus will begin van- ishing from the earth, like other deadly diseases that now are nearing extinction. Dr. N. Kritch is a woman! ! Kritch demonstrates that emancipated woman will ; run neck-and-neck with man in contributing to progress. There would be more famous women than famous men, in history, if men hadn’t kept the women in seclusion for thousands of years. INTU§JTION As women become emancipated and “get the hang of things,” after thousands of years of com- pulsory seclusion they will demonstrate that the female brain is superior to the male. Woman has every brain faculty possessed by man, though reasoning sometimes is dormant be- cause women have been isolated from problems land situations that require reasoning. |,A.few generations will strengthen this ‘faculty! to; ‘par. In addition, woman has ‘the sixth sense, intui- tion, in a degree possessed by no man. Intuition is the shadow of imagination, the dynamic force behind all new things. It was in- tuition that prompted Mrs. Elias Howe to tell her Like Marie Curie, who discovered ‘radium, Dr. |. i- up the talk is ended and the matter is left in a misty suspense. The counsel have no means of knowing {how the judges understand the case {and often they do not understand it jat all. The system of court practice is ra- dically wrong. It leads to needless: errors and delays an* it doubles. the work of counsel and the court and it ; doubles the expense of appeals.” | Now, ag a result of those letters, and of persisterit work by some per- son, the laws delays, and the compul- sory expense of printing briefs and court records may be accounted a have to buy justice or to wait years for a decision. At a small expense 1 party may appeal to our Supreme ;Court, and obtain a final decision ; Within a month. By Statute, “all motions, or appli- jcati ons in any action, ‘special pro- ! ceeding, or other matter,-in the Dis- trict. Court, must be decided and the decision reduced to writing and filed: with the Clerk within 39 days after the submission of the same to thie ;Court for decision, and in actions, | the decision must be reduced to writ- jing and filed within sixty days after the submission.” Code Sec. 7638. This ; Statute ‘should not the treated as a {dead letter. JAMES E. ROBINSON. ‘thing ‘of the past. A suitor does not’, es) harsher lights were not mellowed by the mother husband to move the needle’s eyelet to the sharp eo ’ love that guides us through chilhood, into. ma-|end, thus perfecting the sewing machine. turity and on through life. — 7 The debt we owe our mothers is something that RADIO 3 R’S PAINTING 0: S OWN MOTHER cannot be repaid except in the golden coin of grati-| Six hundred thousand Americans now have WHISTUERS ERIS OWN MOTE begs amen people are wishiag thel tude,and remembrance. ane radio receiving sets, according to manufacturers’| Whistler's portrait of his own mot character inge Bee re isters, an Que Seay Sane atta ee ae marriage licenses “would expire, i - 3 Ne i i it|er is one of the most rema auality 18 whatevaces, pete 8 RO webbed 71 oh,) CAB aw re STV ony « : May 14 is Mother’s Day, now an established latest estimates. — Probably have to multiply it vintiies ‘ot Dake ot : It is one| 22 ties to capture it with oi] or] hair, her honest wrinkles, and her re-|: Only things Wall Street farmers ! yearly custom. If you are fortunate enough to several times to include all who made their own. . na ae pia ‘eee | crayon: : tiring ae aad n¥t' belong to | raise are prices. ery) oy oe canna : Bn ay : the very: few Istancess wiere. an) Bit whistler was able to do yorld, but to the home. i have a mother still living, take her to the theater, : The radio industry has woot 60,000 per cent) artist hasbeen immortalized by his] painted not only a portrait of is ‘the type of mother Whistler| ‘China fell for a shell gamee—war. send her flowers, letter or telegram. in two years. No other industry ever grew aS} own mother on canvas. mether but one of the universal ideal and the memory of this type 3 ; . ‘ an it: 9 ill i 2 The madonna—the young mother |of motherhood as well, one that we ver sie, linor Glyn says boys obey flap- And while we're at it, le(’s try to make every rapidly in its youth. What will it lead to? es satloe woups mother i _ ayy bas, prs like dogs. That’ day Mother’s Day. 4 ‘ “ ae a oa cept sane Har eek are proud of our modern moth- ovens io DcOFeYy we all O00: 3 De iss See = a = inspiration for tho sar but the | ers, with their trim figures and their | nize his artistry en etnineoecaue rain dghatcr A) mother of ‘1iAtiire” ycars “has jeludcd | smart costumes, who are so capable}, People who know nothing of the Se ! " RADIO MOVIES i EDITORIAL REVIEW most of theni: 1919 inside and outside the home, and so |'technique of art love‘this picture for! py ngolions are i “bl a { 4 Is the day close at hand. when: moving picture | art galle ” reel jhe sft that able Ng take care of themeelog. sho -y genlifncs at and pathos: es L ointbe leteec eco hea ae ; “ . a is : . duced ig this col t ,|| WEile wives, sWeethcarts, children and | are the product of our modern civiliza hers love it for its merit as a} ssa films will be broadcasted by wireless, enabling cape metal sere The Tribune.” They are presented here “|| fathers have frequently sétved as mod-| tion and we would not want them to| painting, and marvel at the power-) «qniteg they stand, divided they : 4 4 families to have the best movies right in their || inorder that our readers may have both sides of important imsues 1) cls, the mother has'razely'done so. [ibe different, fal eitect achieved by means of the} fall” is shown in Irelan: d—dividing homes, on a sheet pinned to the wall? hesitate teed iced ara eran The explinition ‘is simple. It is] ‘But at, the sare time, we al cher mle, harmonious arrangement of| patriots gives.us pat riots, ranges “ ‘4 a much’ easier té' paint’ youtli; love, in-| ish aft ideal of motherhood tzat thess grays and blacks, i | eal Impossible, you say? Your ancestors said the POOR TACTICS nocence oF strength than’ it 4s to paint | modern mothers themselves jnstilied Had whistler done nothing. more! What the world needs is a wireless ‘ same thing about the steam railroad, tele; ’ + | character.’ ey ‘i in us—rossibly someone like the] than produce this onc picture, he hook-up for a dress, ‘ ry h . . irel d nt me There seems to be a concerted effort,on the part| ‘The beauty ‘of aifnattiré Woman, lies | grandmother or grcat-grandmother we | would kave ranked among the great : 4 hae i mov ieee ae aa 4 lia when | a number of independents to try andl nominate| not merely in lier feathtes!"but in the | acw as ehildren—a woman frankly) vasters, : jpimAtrlea, brides: are paid, for on ant visionazies. were first predicted by Clallvoy-|7 vn J, Frazier for United States senator simply - praia SOR SAN SS | : = ig 4 ee i xtin candidates lit , i pi : | ogc ber, and said to them, ‘Here-is; . Fly paper doesn’t draw as many y running two or three extra candidates to spli TRIB un TO A MOTHER’S LOVE ' ranels Jen S 2 M A Va j-he only. thing [ found on earth that ‘flies as limousines do friends, C. Francis Jenkins has successfully made the the independent vote. Of course, these men do 5 T U Se i sill koey its fragrance. all the way | ca . i first step toward radio movies P . Y ; 7 a heave? is a ” se"! Our id He exhibits photograph: of im: hich hi not want to elect Frazier, and they dep-ad upon (By Rey. Sam. Jones) 1 will take these flowers with me as; SANE els ie armother's love: ' boing tried teens her bape aa . tranemitted ee is ey nae aie See ts, (the democratic candidate, J. F. T. O'Connor, to] ‘A mother i the puiést/ thing on | a menento of my visit to earth.’ Then | y—- ——_ ++ |and three old maids on the jury. | SI y wireless GUINg -Mis EXPEFIMeNts. | foat him in the fall. jcarth, ‘Thore, Was sine thy gabout my |he locked and he saw a-b: ight-eyed, || Saturday Evening | pee ara Canty This happens in the laboratory of the General eke : . . >.2. {mother that made her w'¢e\ to me as|rosy-checked babe smiling in its ‘ Lett : r ; n isn’t sure of himself, Electric Company, at Lynn, Mass., during the an-| Such political tactics as are being uscd in tis) weet as-am aeolian harps, thore was | mother’s faco; and he gaid, “Oh that | etter cebat makes Ceunantmous: B ‘senatorial contest are extremely shori-sightcd. It} something that/always made the touch | biby’s smile is prettier than the bou- | Tira anes tae torrie oa en es “| Nothing tickles a mosquito m y} een eb astas ania uni is practically a certainty that the republican nom- |° ber hija to me as a and gentle | a ach es ane that ano heh a | By Justice J. E. Reb'nsy than a pair of silk stockings, a a i Pal . a : .* |as zephryrs put in motion: by an ‘an- | lcoke beyon je cradle ani eheld | ' . é a inee will be elected in the fall. If Frazier wins|gor's wing. ie mother's love, pouring like ths) 4. cantite’ tor re-election, 1{_ It Germany, women can’t be judges = i eye iN “ Z ? i 3a F tf x ! Thirty-two years ago, Elisha Gray invented |the nomination through the political trickery of angen atsleout rit, unsbiny day a2 ths panes : riven torart On Gat eo | have filed with ‘Thomas Hall, Secre- |! America, they can’t be otherwise, = i the telautograph. This instrument reproduces O'™Ysby McHarg, P. D. Norton, Judge Lauder|down to this old world and all day | er's love ‘is the most bea’ ictal thing 1 | tary of State, my nominating petition 4 pienfe ts no plenie when {t rains. Be ‘ ae i ni A a ‘ nes aptaye wt ‘ong he roam2d about thru field and |bave secon on earth; T will take that, |® ear handwriting and drawings at‘a distance, electric- Peta of I. V. A, sore-heads, Frazier will be) roo.¢and elty and hamlet, and just | co. And so, with th> three ate hand, | (eee alley tp er elya reir eye i! Princy of Wales will be made Maybe you have seen telephone girls in big| It must be remembered that two years ago Ladd) must go back to, the world of light. ‘vitiin I will oxamine-iny:menion- (2 Mt a ie) ae rare ¢ hotels use such a device, writing’an order on ajhad a sixty thousand majority over Perry, al-|But before I go ‘I will gather some fo lookes| ‘o dmenil’ the] -rvery*year w2 remind college grad- x * 2 ee byes 2 Re mementos of my visit to earth. He s they had ~!uates: the'r medal isn’t worth as much pad before them, while the writing is simultane- though on state issues the vote was close. When} jooked into a beautiful flower garden, N d ; ‘aacthelk mettle: ; a Pry erat ; lit comes to electing members of the United States |and he said, ‘Plow rich and fragrant | Tie looked at the :bther’s' love, and c 4 ‘ ously duplicated by a machine in the kitchen. Mona e 4 eg me Jes 7 re shane these flowers,’ He picked some of the | there it was in all “it pristine beauty | 12ls) 0 pris ‘| records anit When you see a bathing girl in wa- res This copying telegraph apparatus was, expanded |COngress, party principles count» more than peY-) ost heautiful roses in the garden and ance. Hé threw aside ne e = that rr iets ia ae ter up to her neck, she’s skinny. et Oe, i e t: =! y i ] ;. {sonal peeves.—Emmons County‘ Record. made a bouquet of them, and we said, yers and the smite, and going with- +" ral-Supreme © and he Su- 5) into:a Photograph sender in 1906 by Carbonnelli, |§ pee e's ‘Ihave seen nothing more, beautiful; |i, called the high hosts of heaven | Dveme Court of every other state, 12| Good Times may be entered in the the Belgian, who had great. success at telegraph-| Foe eae aaa: Re VEEN BIR ae ig a: $30,000 oaentiee: eens Shoe (Derby, but a horse by that name won't ing pictures by a system of reproducing dots of | | SOCIALISTS AND LABOR 5 Machinery case, just decided by the come in very fast. black, same as the tiny dots you sec-all over pho-|_ A policy of political co-operation with labor and EYERETT TRUE | p BY CONDO |: the pristine: ye Court, it is said of] One trouble with the world is not tographs in newspapers. ss farmer organizations in the separate states was ai gee ra bab eeces 97 volumes (CROvsh wars are boing prevented. | tioned on Monday. by,,the national ti i ; 5 i : Telephotography is extremely complicated. (Sanctioned on Monday. by,,4he national convention MR, TRUS, SiH) BESSSING OES ‘inted_ matter and 4 volumes (f| Now Jersey papers are fighting mos- But: what its students hi dof the Socialist: partyat: Cleveland. The» ‘move! > | ‘ i ms ne ING OF Som The summary of testimoay jquitocs; but mosquitoes can't read ut: what its students have in mind has sprea pa é IRAFELS Tidieets FOR Mile RS NBs OF npiled by the defendants contains - : aa out among the people as a va: re: .jwas hedged about with ‘restrictions safes ling tv! OUCH OUI awe Soe ath ahs ore than 1000 pages. Much of it has} ry teht « : t = peop! gue dream of an_a' » MING, an® ft T Nou'p eee tho moat fasttas to |, movie might ‘say spirits papping \ achment by which you would look into-a glass |the.integrity of the Socialist party, but the signi- ‘= yp tod and ao uehvad was’ ea, fies jareg iuematlent: Cor waiters” ¢a vi ; and see what the party was doing at the other jficance of Socialists seeking political coalition with > a Mr might well have been embraced 7S their orders, a in a much narrower compass than end of the telephone wire. jnon- “Socialists remains. ed in the voluminous record Nene cM: THOUGHT” ear As far back as 1914, Prof. A. Korn was lectur-| This policy is the reflection of the reduced for- | now be brea | | ae | ij In my State pamphlet letter of *—————- ing in Vienna about the possibility of sending |tunes of the Socialist party, which has suffered ‘June 1916, itis said of the printing! My God shall supply all your need, y movies by wireless. \from the general reaction against radicalism on {and other matters: according to His riches and glory.— | 2 ae) A “Four arg ago in my campaign} railippians 4: 19, pees ithe one hand and the Recession of the Cmmunists {for judicial reform I showed how, | * Did you ever see a mirage? If not, you know on the other. Communism in this country is still) vith only two terms of, the Supreme, _Th> central thought of religion is aes | Cour i vear, the judges made a‘of a peace that is beyond the unrest So 5 peal should be heard at |of life, of a harmony that transcends D succeeding term of the Coart/all its discords, of a unity of purpos2 ‘unless taken ninety days before tre! wh’ch works through all the conflict day cf the term, and a rule that/of- the forces of nature, and the still case thé appellant must print; more intense conflict of the wills of jmen.—Edward Caird. about them—the appearance in the sky of-a per. fighting hard. It is on the aggressive in the) ' i fect picture of some distant city, lake or mountain. jtanks of the International Ladies’ Garment Work- .: That is one of nature’s ways of broadcasting ;ets, Now in conyention at Cleveland, where the pictures. {Communists are rallying a strong minority, after When you watch the movements of people or; ‘showing themselves powerful enough to force Ben- objects, you are seeing nature’s original wireless jamin Schlesinger, the veteran president of the; movie system—and it’s all as mechanical as oper- union, to quit in disgust. Nevertheless, it is a ating a camera. ‘Iesing fight.. It is the last upflare before Amer- The principle of radio movies exists in nature, |ican Communists join the main body of Commun- That inventors may learn how to copy nature and} ism under Lenin in the general strategic retreat. send movies by wireless, requires no great stretch} The rapprochement with labor sought by the| of the imagination. It may not come in our day. Socialists, on the other hand, promises to be a} But it,will come eventually. |permanent factor, A humbler state of mind has) In a movie theater, light waves gransmit a mov-| followed upon recognition of the truth that it is ing picture from the’ projecting machine to the |not for Socialist intellectuals to lay down the law| silver screen, usually about 75 feet. The powerful |to labor, but that Socialism adapt itself to labor! Hertzian waves may extend that 75 feet to thou-|psychology and conditions in this country as they; sands of miles. \find them. It is a change reflected some time ago | as +» jin the transformation of the Socialist Review | ; JAPAN ‘into the Labor Review. | It is a victory for the’ Wholesale prices continue slurnping in Japan, W. Z. Foster policy of “boring from within.” To where they now are about twice as high as before the outsider that phrase has an ominous mean-! the war. : ing. To the Socialist it represents a good deal of This is important to us, because the world-wide @ surrender. It is the subordination of revolution- | epidemic of price crashing started in. Japan.\aty “ideology” to labor facts—New York Even-| Watch that part of the world, same'as you would ing Post. E a saat b — Don't You. KNOW MG # INTRODUCED TO You LAST NISHT Avy = fe iin every. {the appeal record. As I showed, those j rules imposed on swhors jentsy ous i j del and burdens; tus, in a suit) &— Tor $300 the needless printing cost|| | | “TODAY'S WORD | eg ‘was naan the total cost was $858. !'\g__. D. 481.) In one case the pring ess st was $3,607.50. The result of Today’ 's word is NEGLIGIBLE, lmy showing was that in 1913, the|. It's prondunced—neg-li-ji-b’l, ‘Legislature passed an act abrogating|4ccent on the first syllable. those rules and establishing in each|, It mans—that which may be neg- : a four general terms of the Court ‘ected or disregarded; not important wait ve in liéu of two terms.” jenough f> be worth consideration. So in my letter of Jurfe, 1912, It comes \fron—Latin “neglegere,” . said: ito disregard, to neglect. ‘ z “The system of court» procedure! It’s used like this—“Demograts in comes down from a time when the|Congress seem to think that the sav- judge was a tyrant and still it bears|ing the government is likely to ac- the marks of pomp.and power, pride 'complish by means of the budget sys- and selfishness. At every step there|tem will be negligible.” is a woeful waste of time and mone and a blind disregard of business eco-| | CHILDREN IN SPRING TIME Mrs. C. Osborn, 7812 Hillside Rd., nomy and the welfare of the parties! and the public. The expense of a law, Cleveland, 0., writes: “My grand: : suit is commonly ruinous to both tie|daughter was troubled with a cough winner and the loser, and yet, a large | for nearly two years. She took Foley’s nart of it/is levied on the taxpayers.|Honey and Tar and her cough is now In the Arial of a court case the rec-| gone. It loosened the phlegm so she ord is filled with all kinds of matter | could taise it easily.” Foley’s Honey 2 and in case of an appeal it must alliand Tar is just what children should ve printed in the form of a book which|have for feverish colds, coughs “snuf- / > is called an abstract. This is, seldom|fles”-hnd tight, wheezing breathing. if ever read, In a recent case the cost: Be sitré to. get Foley's. © It checks of printing was $3,607.50. There is no crowp and whooping cough, too, with it is) DOn'r KNOW You tt HOWGVER, THE LONGER You, StTiIc¢K AROUND NERS THe Better WE'LL BECOME ACQUAINTED fi! Tt RENENGER ‘ou, BLT ZT

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