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my age —s PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STAT: PAPER (Establishew 1873) Published by the Bismarck ‘Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, as second class mail matt George D. Mann wee. President d Publisher Subsertption Rates able Tn Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year Cin Bismar Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bisa Daily by mail, outside of Nor per Audit Bureau of Chrealation ay Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published here in, ALL rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved, Forelgn Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg a PAYNE, RURNS AND SMITIL NEW YORK - Fitth Ave. Bldg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Substantial Assistance News that American and Briti nkers have purchased a half interest in one of the largest ane most prosperous holdings of the Stinnes estate in dicates the kind of assistance that is being ex to avert a panic or industr hot the German industrialist plunged his affairs into a serious condition, His vast holdings were held together by the genius of the great Stinnes. He had trained the load in the event of his death, a defect too t corporations. tate is virtually in the hands nks of Germany are acting in that capacit ng to the various interests to competent persons so there will be no breaking down of the industrial life of the nation, America, through the intervention of New York banke tres in the movement to keep the wheels of industry moving in the German republic. Disintegration of the Stinnes fortune created ‘ sensation in financial circles. The chief objective jon of cap- event financial depression ‘by the se tended to Germany depression. — De prevalent in the management of g: » great Stinnes © of a receiver. The and are in the handling of this great accumu ital was to p ing of shares on the open market. Such a blow to Germany seeking a way out under the Dav plan would probably have called for a new plan of financ- ing that nation. Success of the diplomacy, which has been a be ject of negotiations for more than a year, hinged upon the protection of the great Stinnes interests from too hasty liquidation, A Real Citizen An American in Japan was offered, by a Japane certaip yaluabie Japanese naval secrets, according to news dispatches. Instead of accepting, he turned the traitorous Nipponese over to the police. In so doing he proved himself a real American Actions like that go far toward removing Japan's distrust of America and making conflict between the two nations forever impossible, Always at It We are justly proud of the fact that almost all of our national heroes were men who started “at the ‘hottom”; ning. who attained fame from a lowly ‘begin: This is comforting to the young man starting out our great on his own, But let him remember thi men did not play around for four or five years be- fore starting to work. ‘They began early and kept | put with some di at it. no other way. eternal There Delinquency A New Jersey city reports, through the Play- ground and Recreation Association of Ameria, that 500 boys were organized into a municipal baseball league and given playing fields. The cost of repairing broken windows, which ha been $150 the year before, dropped! to $17.70. This would seem to indicate that, if boys can be given something interesting to do—a chance to play, to work off their surpius energy—there is less de linquency. And, since we adults are the ones who can give them these things, it alsd would seem that when we. have a high juvenile delinquency rate it i8 pretty much our own fault. Super Power Gifford Pinchot sounds a timely note of warning in connection with the rise of vast super-powet electrical projects. Let a fair, effective anc! well thougit out public * control system ‘be devised at once, before this thing gets too big for us, he pleads. And there is logi¢ in his plea, vie |e as well as to the companies. “This vast monopoly of power is advancing to completion by leaps and hounds,” he says. “When it ig here, and that means soon, nothing but effective regulations will keep it from dealing| ment. with all but a few great consumers under the rule of fang and claw. : Recreation be - by Dispatches from Swampscott, Mass., say President Coolidge ig actually more or less at a joss how to epend his vacation, now that he hap it.’ Ld ze old New England school, all his life. & finds he can’t. vs: no one to carry | 9 it hot so much in stopping worl « after the terrific grind of work heavy, and perhaps once in a w rihof the whole husine Don't get discoura mortgages are hard, to be sure but that way Tie finaneial independence Once a man much ean stop. him, Colleges A writer in a current weekiy m that colleges should not have beautiful campuses anit they stunts can" cloistered halls, Instead, he be in the city slums so the and not develop any rosy illusions about it. It all depends on what you want your colleges to do. One theory is that a college is supposed to Biv a lad enough of a taste of beauty and euitured | ure that they will s after he gets out into the world y by him and sweeten his life Prison Labor Secrethry of Labor James J. Davis has begun # ‘campaign to wipe out entirely the employment of prison labor competition with free libor, em of penology is all wrong, he a pointing out that prison n goo’s made on the outside, thus providing a new handicap for honest business, and also that in ver: few cases is the prisoner taught a trade that will be of any use to him after he gets out. The secretary would revise the entire sy He would, first of all, bh mught trades that they can apply after they are edo amd thus ade goods can underseli p all convicts eseape the pinch of pove to crime. In addition, he would! inerease the amount of rot construction by prisoners. ‘Think his recommendations over. One thing is certain; the tty sa at fault, It might well be that Mr * suggestions would improve it About Bonds ‘ The American Bankers Association urges tha! prospective purchasers of bonds consult thei e buying, unless chey niliar withthe securities offered bank ers bet are thoroug good idea, . A speaker before the National Hay ass barely be suttic 1924. good “pay streak.” ent to pay for the dairy praducts There will probably be so many progressive con tonal have a show, “Holy Mackerel!” (New Orleans Times Picayune) Pinchot does not ask public ownership. But he points out that the growth of this huge network of electric wires all over the nation must be handled to bring the greatest posstble good to the consume? He doesn’t golf or ride or play tennis, and he ¥* thinks fishing is a “boys’ game.” Diversions of » former presidents seem to have no appeal for him. Tie president has been a hard worker, of the He hasn't & taken time to play, and now when he needs to he a crazy notion in his i joes in doing, something different. It will be regrettable if Pres: lident Cootid Washington, is unable to get the proper mental and at physical refreshment on his vacation. Hard Work When the first flush of joy over being in you: own home, instead of an apartment, dies aw a are apt to find the mortgage payments just a bit Hyon will wish | Monthiy payments ony lifted a first mortgage, nothing | azine suggests | tem We have in our prisons now is It's a good idea, Reputable bond salesmen won't object. The other kind may,—and that’s why it's 4 ociation in Chicago recently put the dairy cow above the oil well for value. All the gold mined since 1885 would | orth Dakota has found the cow a Pretty for Bob La Follette’s seat in the senate that an ordinary dub of a standpat republican may I | Editorial Comment | : Uc Nc ‘The bureau of fisheries of Washington is con- fronted with a mystery. Why does the mackerel lo as he does do? He moves in great schools north along the coast one year, and the next year he takes ad to. go somewhere else. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE oer | \ | LiKe THE | LOOKS OF \ THAT FELLOW | ™ forces LET TON TO LESSLIE CONTINUE I need not tell you what ple thing love very dearly { from your sight, {all the time you know th ESCO’ j with you. You went throu; watched by your fath long; but your father to he much older than ¥ although | know this comfort. to you, yet ase take on’ so. could not even of. R particular love for her little gir! thongh she spent long hou at her with most pecu noon her the ! ceame made y to see Bee did not say much to 1 but I caught her on i ing at her friend with the s: on her » that she eyes were turned on the child. e grew unaccountably but st weaker. Championship Material HE LOOKS LIKE ONe oF Tie BEST WE EVER Produced yhand, wea j\ I've been cheated.” | when Puff los a hat's button number = ® 7 = And without another word he put (An intimate story of innermost the king’s butter-d emotions revealed in private letters) TER FROM SALLY ATHER- | id ‘OTT into his pocket (To Be Continued) ' (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) i nothing jcum be done to keep that loved one} is when you} bedside so remembered, e uhad told me about the letter she jhad written you, and 1 could not help wondering wha plex had taken pos A BROADWAYITE t peculiar com- eto you in your poke very lit- nd then only to give some diree- ,tigh in the® meagerest of words. y of her death New York-- Walle big city with dwaffing those who live among theni, the beau outdoors is © in by the high @ never seemed to have any he seemed per- Hinge he the sun, The sun destr hed if T had he frequently ob- i rar lying on the bed "1 thought that a her. a. but I told her I would tell it to nto things of fan ty by the alchemy of nigh rnoon and the two Brooklyn Bridge af netted curtain and bey ing buildings hang like embroi i lighted win- dows becoming grotesque designs in ime out of the room her anation and I (Copyright, 1 TOMORKOW—Letter Atherton to Leslie Prescott. In the stream below a tug, soi smoky and’ awkward passes with its ugly lines softened in the dusk, its steam and mi from Sally The doctors, unable to Consequently New England fishhermen don’t know ADVENTURE OF where to go to catch him. Jf only he would stay egree of regularity all would be THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON well, But he won't. But then, all fish are peculiar. Why cy the Waltons of the World, patient and otherwise, sit for hours on lonely creek ‘banks without a sign oi a bite? Why does a frecklefaced kld run away tu|Tewn and asked to see the king. the creek and come home with a string long euougit to constitute a ipeace offering, while his faher, learned in the lore of the finny tribe, hep to their a | Whims and their vagaries, wise to the influence ot while he is eating.” the winds and the tides, comes sneaking up a back alley empty-handed? theory? Has nature equipped! the piscato! to solve. The Importance of Environment (Roanoke Times) “He is a rare man,” correctly (ys rves the Ba! happiness.” ations with the utmost care and circumsp is learned outside the home. Be noble! and the nobleness that Hes In other men, sleeping, but never dead, Is it a manifestation of the survival of the fittest jal species with a subtle power of reasoning that enables him to frustrate man in his effort to effect capture? Certainly it seems to fit in with a great deal that | button,’ we have long been taught about the ways of nature. In the meantime the government is on the trail. Be it hoped that its efforts are crowned with suc- cess. Just as a suggestion, however, there is Tea son to believe that it is.a question for psychologists more Evening Sun, “who can associate with cynics without becoming cynical, with the morbid withour becoming morbid; a rare man who does not shade) ““«pear! Dear!” said the king fin-; his convictions, unconsciousiy perhaps, to pleas those on whom he depends for bread and butter and It would be hard to find a more impressive oF convincing argument for the importance of environ- If it is true that to associate wita cynics is to become cynical, and that association with the | himself anv size he wished. morbid makes one morbid, then it is obylous that we} | “Dear! Dea said the king should choose our companions and form our associ- So six the other. with a clatter. hill not mistaken I see about six do: buttons on your coat. Couldn't and eat somehting.’ seated. When the soup was brought spoonful. e | alll: “It’s very hot weather. Too hot | for hot soup. It should be cold your buttons, Mister Juggle Jum: than a butter dish. ing like,a silver veil about it, its soft chug-chug giving it the pulse butter-dish.” Suddenly Nancy thought of some- “May I see it?” ki “Certainly,” said the king handing In the farther and dimmer reaches | of the harbor from the shadows show little lights like eyes of living things prowling about. As they be- come closer and more distinct they are seen to be lopg barges towed by a tug far in advance. The crescent of the new moon is perched on the tip of the Woolworth “It’s the one he sneeezed off when he was peppefing At last Juggle Jump and the Twins | tee: pete ‘ ae reached the Royal Palace in Tumble | “The idea!” exclaimed the king's aunt coming in just then. it at the china store for fifty cents. “He is just sitting down to lunch,” said the footman with a hop, skip and jump. “But just come into the | dining room and he can talk to you EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO a NOTHER : THING 1 WANT TO BRING TO Your AT- TENTION AT THIS-TIME, MR. TRUG, tS -°° rvants led the way allj hopping first on one foot and then “What can I do for you, good peo- ple?” asked the king laying down his fork which slid clear across the wobbling table and fell to the floor “We are looking for Puff’s lost s NG. said Juggle Jump. “He the Fairy Queen’s cook and he got so fat from tasting that his last but- ton flew off and bounced over the to this place. Did you see it?” 0,” said the king. “But if I'm spare him a few? But don’t stand there. Come and sit down everybody | As the chairs kept moving and the table kept moving and everything in the king's dining room kept moving. it was quite a time before the three | of them managed -to get themselves splashed so that it was hard to get a! soup. Very cold soup! Solid soup _ |ANY SIDS are LeT’S o RID OF THe A f MEDIATELY AT {that won't spill. I shall speak to |the cook. Now tell me the story of “Certainly, sir!” said Juggle Jump, And then he explained that by press- ing different buttons he could make Tumble Town again’ “I wish T had a coat e that. Then T could eat all I wished and not be afraid of get- iness begets | ting too fat. I’d press the ‘thin’ Just as gloom begets gloom, 92 happiness ee | button once a week and begin all happiness. Live with those who are pure at heart, | over again. A present like that and none (but pure and uplifting thoughts will come. ; would be much re worth while Play with dirt and it necessarily follows that one’s handg will be soiled, We are what we aro largely of the jumping servants. “Hey. because of those who have been about us from in-| there! his butter is melting and i s fancy. Invariably the child's first knowlédge of evll Fanning elt aver the tableciory. Take , “It’s the holes, sir!” said the ser- vant. “The new pearl butter-dish that your aunt sent you yesterday Suddenly he stopped and called one MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1925 ONE SPOT WHERE YOU HEAR NO JAZZ MUSIC This is from Hawaii, as all this column will be for perhups two more weeks, All tourist resorts ha their jt certain Hawaiian bo d perhaps the m Iking point” of them they say, you can escape i ‘There are, to be sure, hotel dane: estras in Honolylu which per- play jazz for visitors who e j would not know how to dance to anything else. But they play it apologetically, and none too well, as good musicians should, And generally, even tourist com- mercialism finds it profitable to banish the Possibly this is the only accessible spot on earth still relatively unin- fected. The plaintively melodious native Hawaiian music has gone all over the world, and even chance visitors are already familiar enough ith it to want to hear it on its | native soil. Probably it could not happ@ ‘now even in Hawaii, but the writer re- culls a few years ago, attending a jazz concert in Honolulu with one of the most cultivated ladies in the is- lands who had, until then, never heard jazz. This was from a college glee club, stopping over one day on their way to the Orient, and naturally they jazzed the jazz as only college boys can. It was interesting to note the reaction of a cultivated and sensi- tiye but wholly unprepared mind. ‘The comment was, “startling, but interesting.” There was no sugges- tion that it was music. Polynesian Music And How it Rose This Polynesian music, of which the Hawaiian is the only form famil- iar to the outside world, is an in teresting development. Originally the Polynesian peoples had ch African four notes, One can hear chants in Nubia und in Fiji which a wester: uld scarcely tell apart. missionaries had difficulty teaching them the western seale. But, when they once learned their inherent artistie genius caused them to develop it in forms more and melodious than any the missionaries knew. The world knows the plaintive Hawaiian form. In Fiji it is more barbaric. The Fijians are only part Polynesian, and are mostly of ne- groid blood. One of them intones the melody, in a way familiar in the singing of American negroes, while the others “boom-hoom” the accompaniment in constantly accelerated “ time, in a way that belongs distinctly to the jungle. Yet the air itself is probably recognizably derived from some fa- miliar Methodist camp-meeting hymn, In Tah takes the form of orgies of singing “himenes.” All are totally different from the orig- inal native chant, but all are also refinements of the early nineteenth- century Protestant church music from which they are derived. Tower, a religious symbol, as it awere, of the ecclesiastical beauty of that magnificent cathedral of com- j merce. \ Two lovers stroll along hand in their way through the shadow and beams the bridge, Through their romantic eyes this is as true Lover's Lane as though were lined with giant trees casting their canopy of branches And over the restles: lurid lights and the artificialit: hts of Broadw ty close at hand. Julius Tannen, master of cere- monies for a coming one of the most popular | comedians on Broadway, although he cast by the great struts scene there is a soothing calm that beguiles the to forgetting the y of the life about |him. And the mirage of trees and hills and the call of tne open are blotted out by the reality of a beau- Vkeep on the has been well known in the theatre world for years. He possesses the faculty of making extemporaneous wit appear easy. He talks along casually and seems not to point any one sentence for comic effect, there is a laugh in almost eve he speaks. As an extempo commentator on current happenings he is a smoother wit than Will Rog. ers. Here is a sample of Tannen mon- $s venue this afternoon, noticing the women’s styles and they were rather easy to see through, I found. You know, 1 got to thinking that when some of those women got home they would have to dress to go to bed. If things vay they are going, these swell shops will be sending the clothes the women buy to their hus- new revue, is fast be- {bands and the women will wear the i . JAMES W. DEAN. FABLES ON HEALTH HOW TO ATTAIN A LONG LIFE ' Longevity, comes only to those, upon advice of a physician, Use of who constantly ch their health, | tea, coffee and tobacco should be Vitality can not be squandered if, moderate. one wishes to come with advancing yea A life in the open, well planned exercise; early to bed und early to rise; plenty of good water and a diet consisting — main’ fruits, nuts and vege years to your life's When walking or and always is a tonie to health, Medicines should be taken only e tou ripe old age, free from the weaknesses which of | dj tions are detriment germs general Imperfect light should be avoided when reading. It is hard on the eyes and consequently causes 4 drain on the nervous system. Cheerfulness and optimism should prevail over and ‘worry, hatred and malice. Unrequited emo- if you are in lave, marry. Keep your mind active and your hody active. The price for 1 filness—but it i price. ty is wateh- well) worth the TOM gi If the world really is as old as ay, then it certainly is small No doctor thinks you can live properly without letting him put in in few modern improvements. Flies never use napkins. All compliments received are the property of the person giving them and should be returned. The only really expensive thing about a home is the bills. An ounce of intention may need a pound of cure. So live that even people who are not selling anything will be glad to meet you. Make a mousetrap better than thy neighbor and all the cheese sales- men will flock to thy door. We were anxious to see the first signs of summer and we will be just as anxious to see the last signs. Wouldn't it be fine to be an Eski- mo’s hubby and sit around the house on-a big cake of ice. If brevity swere the soul of wit you soularenchle yourself to death ¢) at a bunch of bathing suits. Some men, have gotten along s0 well in business they have to wear their coats all da: One improvement in modern cook- ing is wife hits hubby with a can opener instead of a rolling pin. Flying around too much’ isn’t guar- anteed to make you an angel. Two can live steeper than one. People who live in bathing suits should not eat too. much, A freight train whistle. sounds like a radio soprano. ; Many a good beau plays second’ fiddle. Manv a hard-boiled egg gets cracked. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ee | ATHOUGHT ! —“——-- Watch therefore, for ye know neither the dav nor the hour where- in the Son of Man cometh.—Matthew 313, tae Let death and exile, and oll other terri PP daily before, your ev for your birthday is full of holes. Four round holes all alike and right hiefly; and you will never enter- SIMS ‘SAYS The only good Juck some men seem to have is being misunder- | stood, JAPAN TO AID IN ESTABLISHING WIRELESS TELEGRAPH COMPANY kyo, July 31-—()—Viscount va and Buron K. Nakashima have been uppointed by Premier Kato spectively, of the committee which will establish the Japanese Wireless Telegraph Company under joint man- agement of the government and pri- vate interests. The company is to be organized with the government wire- less station at Iwaki, Fukushima pre- fecture, as its principal asset. This will be/sapplemented by subscrip tions to shares by prominent busi- ness men of Japan, In the course of a speech to’ the committee members, Premier Kato stated that the completion of the in- ternational telegraphic service was a matter of vital importance for military, diplomatic and cultural development. FLAPPER FANNY says: Music used to soothe the, soul— now it makes the shoulders jerk. ———________-+ ! LITTLE JOE © | ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME, MIGHT SMELL as SWEET, BUT NOT SO WITH A SKUNK AO,