The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1926, Page 8

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: f } i } PAGE EIGHT The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) ‘Published by the Bismarck Tribune Com Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ismarck, as second class mail matter. eorge D. Manns........President and Publisher | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year. Res «+ $7.20 | Daily by mail, per ycar, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Prensa Whe 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 alay the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are 1 in Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY _ CHICAGO DETROIT Tower sue Kresge Bldg. | YNE, BURNS AND SMITH _ - Fifth Ave. Bldg. ceca SFE ne hd ‘Official City, State and County Newspaper) $$$ NEW YORK Is It Revolutionary? Probably the most serious aspect of the British! strike is not the industrial issues involved, but the | revolutionary ones. The Mail, in its editorial, and Country,” wrote the following words: | ! al strike is not an industrial dispute; it 2 revolutionary movement, intended to inflict fering upon the great mass of innocent persons, doubtless wrote sincerely. London Daily uf. it Whether the trend of the strike will be toward revolution remains to be seen. England had adequate notice to prepare for a gen- eral strike and indications are that much of the suf- fering that would have occurred has been greatly mitigated. While daily life was disturbed in its reutine, complete paralysis was avoided through | governmental efficiency. But revolution is still far in the offing. The strike | has dispelled some of the hysteria that rated this upheaval as the “most grave domestic menace since the fall of the Stuarts.” One editorial in The London Times declares that the “last thing this democracy wants is a revolution of any kind.” ! General strikes are seldom successful. They fall | by reason of ‘being unwieldly and incoherent. Sym-} pathetic strikes usually start strong and then wane rapidly. The slogan of the strikers is “not a penny | off, not an hour on They are fighting for status quo as far as hours and wages go. . The cessation of the coal subsidy hastened the; strike. It is admitted that the mine owners bungled | matters by delaying negotiations too long. Condi- tions in the coal industry are bad. Methods of min- ing aic crude and competition with other European coal fields acute. There is considerable sympathy for the miners but | little for the labor leaders who called a general! strike for the purpose of coercing a settlement. Can- on Donaldson of Westminster, preaching the Sunday before the strike was declared, spoke strongly in favor of the miners, who, he declared, were defending a ndard of life it had taken a century of social and political agitation to reach. He said in addition that the miner was struggling against an industrial form) of slavery and “by every precept of fraternity and fellowship the clergy and the church ought to stand by him. The other side of the picture as presented by the! government is summed up in this ©: pt from a cab- inet warning: “Such action (a general strike) involves a chal- lenge to the constitutional rights and freedom of the nation.” Probably much of the sympathy the miners may have had will be lost through a coercive strike. Premier Baldwin will keep negotiations alive as long as there is a prospect for a settlement, but he must at any cost assert the right of the ma- ,dority to rule over the domination of the minority. & History has shown that the English people have Aebefore the World war. They might’ also get scme! vety efficient way of working out their own eco- nomic problems without resort to force of arms. It is to be hoped that the settlement of this strike will sustain the peaceful traditions of thg nation. There have been as grave crises before. | ' Favoring prohibition modification in Washington. All the bvotleggers must be out of town. Pennington’s Career From a railway warehouseman to president of a great railway system, spans the useful career of Ed- | forg, but it doesn’t sound enough like cussing. | Red is , teachers. jean not work in every way equal to man’s and that therefore they should not have equal pay. or an insult—according to how the late audience di- gested its evening meal. The solution of the straggling audience problem is not to come from the stage but from the lobby. The dimming of the lights should be the signal for ushers to keep tardy arrivals from rushing down the | ‘courageous producers have done this with success, The practice might be made universal. etitd = | “Smog” is a new word coined to describe damp} eee 2 1 aire \ Yellow Tail-lights i H Many automobile associations are conducting a campaign to have automobile — tail-lights changed | from red to yellow. Red, as color used for indicating danger and interpreted “stop,” misused today. | used by the railroads and on traffic control} semaphores to indicate “stop.” Red lanterns on a! street undergoing repairs mean danger. Some cities used red “No Parking” signs because motorists over- | look green ones. Red with the word “stop” is re- | peated on every highway hot dog stand. j A red automobile tail-light is confu: automobile associations backing the cl “Look at a motor route at night and see a line of red tail-lights. After you drive into a ditch marked with red lanterns you realize that it was not a pro- cession of autos you saw.” A yellow tail-light for cars would indicate “cau- | tion” and not “danger.” However, the change would affect so many millions of vehicles and would be so tied up by state laws that it is almost impractical at the present time. In Dayton, O., thousands of dollars went up in smoke instead of in airplan The Masks We Wear H The mask behind which each of us mortals lives is the theme of that season’s play which has caused more interest than any other. It is in the great American playwright, Eugene ; | O'Neill, that this theme of men and women being ; other than they seem, finds deft handling. The re- sultant play is called “The Great God Brown.” Brown | is to the world a success. A Great God. But behind the mask which he wears to the world his real self knows the compromises he has made j ” with honesty, ambition and the best within him. Brown loves a woman whom he really sees behind | the mask. But when Margaret puts the mask upon | her face he turns away. And, when she looks at; Brown, she sees not him but the mask he wears. And} another man loves Margaret for the mask she wears but does not know her when she holds it in her hand. A strange play, this. Perplexing, thought-provok- | i i | | i} = ed Al I smiled to myself as I settled down ing. Are we what we are or what we think we are?! on a secluded bench behind a trellis Does the world know us and love us for the masks | over which was trained a morning glory vin The flowers had all gone or any of it for the life behind the mask? | EditorialComment . |! Bold Britons Speak Right Out (New York Times) In this country the women school teachers have | had no little difficulty’ in getting what they call! qual pay for equal work.” While the men teac! S, as a class, have not been enthusiastic supporters! thi arr notice that the shadows v ening until I felt tight fin to sleep, but the green leaves made-a perfect screen for me. I fished out 3 piece of note paper from my bag and discovered a pencil and write, using the back of the beautiful | mirror to write on. é { was very busy trying to write my j mother the kind of a want to read without teljing her any- began to letter she would “of my adventures. since 1 had ed in Ch ear. of their sisters, few of them have made their antag-| spoken if 1 had : i wae + wanted to. 1 couldn’t even turn my onism to equality of pay and position articulate. hail! In England it is different. There the schoolmas-| “Look here,” continued the voice ters, assembled in convention in Hull, have not h tated to denounce the giving of like pay to men and} women as a cruel injustice to the former, and they| lemnly have agreed never, never, to serve as as- nt masters under women’ headmistresses. As ; one of these true sons of Adam put it, “The women | are relentless in their efforts to secure equal pay, and the men will have to meet their irrational policy relentlessly.” Just what they are going to do aside from re- fusing to take positions subordinate to women, is not revealed by the special dispatch to the Herald Tribune. Perhaps they are going to resort to meas- ures analogous to ‘the vigorous ones against mas- culine enemies taken by the English suffragettes just ‘ind. my | off, “y and the ithree useful suggestions from our own Ku Klux Klan in dealing with women found objectionable for other reasons than getting too many and too big jobs as Not for them are pussy-footing argu- ments that, taken by and large, women do not and said they Every Week for Cleaning Up (New York Times) ' \ The Commissioner of Health, Dr. Harris, is to be commended for having decided to. abolish “Clean-Up) ! may One mond E. Pennington who died recently in Minneap- lis, Forty years of faithful service, not “pull,” put him where he was when death came. He witnessed a ‘wonderful growth in the Northwest and had much to do in directing that development. i He was known to many in this state and always showed a great interest in the development of the territory tributary to Bismarck. Bismarck had a good friend in E. E. Pennington. He knew the needs of the state and cooperated in many ways to pro- mote its development. Follewing duty in a warehouse, he became brake- man and conductor and worked up the various steps to coadmaster and superintendent. He began his career at 21 years with the St. Paul rcad in 1869,! going later to the Minneapolis & Pacific and finally in 1888 he became a superintendent of the Soo line. He passed through a strenuous period of develop- ment of the Northwest railroads. # | Upon the death of Thomas Lowry: he was elected president of the company and it grew and prospered under his management. He leaves many friends to mourn him in his state and this vicinity. j £tcrm-tessed American ship was abandoned.' This, however, was not the ship of state. | The Pests That Come Late — pold Stokewski, famous conductor of the Phil- J orchestra, acted bravely when he “turned on ‘the audience” and had his men stalk onto the stage | had reached the limit in suffering the inconven- comers. future. The act might py 0 Saree Boek joke) Week.” He prefers to have, the city keep itself clean for all of the fifty-two weeks. Information laid be- | fore him concerning the effect of assigning one week | in the year for a heroic effort to get rid of litter and rubbish in the streets, and to clear away filth of var- ious kinds lurking in holes and corners, has convince: him that the method is both misleading and disap- | pointing. It is too much liké taking one bath a year and going complacently dirty the rest of the time. After a single week of sweeping and garnishing, it has been found that too many of the residents of this! city relapse into their habit of making streets and | gutters, alleyways and area spaces and subway en- trances, a convenient catch-all for whatever it is de- sired to “throw out.” Certainly the cleanliness that is next to godliness cannot be achieved in that way. It must be sought and insisted upon throughout the whole twelve-month, Abolishing “Clean-Up Week” merely means that health inspectors and the police specially charged with duties in connection with gether with the Street Cleaning Department, must not relax their vigilance for a single day—let alone all the year except one week for a concerted and gi- gantic wielding of the scrubbing brush. It is said that there is too much work for the existing force of inspectors. Then they must work harder or more | systematically, or-else their numbers must be en-, larged. /There is obviously. room for a gr¢at deal of! volunteer. service. Housewives, with citizens going ‘tg and from their work, can make it a duty to report to the police, or to the Department of Health, all vio- that toda: two you fore Oo} omet! t rid of the notion that ‘should content ry siptcopterrd hamlet or a mining camp, with one con- ing cleaning. The wotk for hedith ightliness must be kept up through- out the entire year if it is to be really effective and worth while. “All ‘Hand ove . has no business witl ki put me in right with 1 “Hand it ov Although 1 was choking I managed to move the bag along the There was a little extra pre: to bed, haven't ‘Yes, they ha Nancy. ter Stamps, the fairy postman, said patch at five o’clock you will get your rortunes told. Please don't be late. ute 1 Tingaling didn’t even wait to put his letter back into the envelope. went ‘the three of them pitter patter as fast as they could run te-he briar. pach—tentbook, pocketbook, lead pe halk dine.‘ Stop’ er So they all stopped—just like that, 3 “Does Oofty Goofty live here?” called | public sanitation, to- | ba Tingaling. | from aon briat-patch. “This is Oofty Goofty. fortune “Yes, sir! I mean, yes, ma’am. |should I say, ‘Yes, wir’! Mister Tingaling ‘nervous ag PR “A good fortuye,” si “Qofty Goofty!” Where But i 1 ft landlord ‘ied and tried, {tations of the sanitary rules which fall. uhder thelr! its ry. landiord, tried and trie Ht Je aomiething to fiave “Yoo, Oofty ave voice, “But Tingaling: . “First you must all go and ‘hide our eyes atid count to five hundred i fives. unless your hands are empty. Y« must lay everything you have with that bag. A girl like you a thing of t . It will do me some good, and y bootlegger bench, ing 0} throat. My breath w: and I knew no more, “TWINS CLIVE ROBERTS BARTON do believe that Snitcher Snatch azookumses ‘have gone er Tingaling. “We them for ne; two said ) seen , most likely,” said “We can collect the rest of ts without any more trouble, 1 were an awful nuisance,” Nick. “You never knew what ‘were going to do next, and their manners were dreadful.” “That's right,” declared the fairy man. “Dreadful! But of course they grow up into good Gazookumses. can never tell. By the way, just go in and get my mail. the would try to have one for me y= They all went into the postoffice then and asked there was any mail for Mister Tinga- ling. he mind you—there was! It said: “Dear Landlord: ‘Mister Stamps if if you and your helpers will come to the briar- “Expectingly yours, “Oofty Goof The Post Office clock said one min- to five, so you may be sure that oft a white line on the ground. “it. was a sign which said, answered a squeaky voice Do you wich to have your rar Or stammered “Will fait zne @ good fortung or # bal the vpice. ‘Mister Tinga- e Twins with @ puzzled look. have I heard that name be- bad . although Naney and Nick and ply could rémember, who ‘Goofty was. és if Goofty says you are to fortune!” went on the you must do as I say.” TH do it,” said Mister right, i: “What is it But the charm won't work You THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE t| have a good mind to ran you in.” choked | All Hatched at Last | | | AY Yah %, 7M, i ' x cola hn ® (To Be Continued.) ht, 1926, NEA Serviec, Inc.) Dakvimtiats Wh 3 New York, 7.—The west had its “Billy, the Ki who was put to rest by a sheriff's bull>t at the tender age of 23—but not be : nad shot his full quota of 20, not meluding Indians and Mexicans. ‘ Now and then, and the tale tell “Two-Gun Charli Pete.” It-has been the orzvatent beiief thati all such belonged to the land where men were men until fictioneers turned them into’ sentimental saps. ‘And include such a character in the Broad- way herd would have been nothi short of treason. Yot a “two-gun man” does'toam the? ranges of the great w! to believe any ;roportion of there are notches in other lamp-post from Fortieti s ‘to Harlem marking ‘the end of guys” who fell at ~ Joe Murphy i | When I cume to myself, it was | dark. The man had also taken my wateh, and T had no way of telling what time it was. I knew ‘it must be rather late for I could sce | that the park was shut for the night.! At first Isdidn't know what had hap- pened, and then as memory came back to me, 1 was hogror-struck with fear. Stumblingly I got up to my and made my way to the park |entrance, I was just going out into the lighted street with a sigh of relie when a hand clamped down on my shoulder. “Where have to the movies sull hesr of “ieadshot aad you come from?” nan. answered, stupidly. , young woman. Don't] é park is closed after | What have you been! ¥° e th nine doing in there ving choked nearly to deati yhat is that? What is that? Be Let me tell you that I am : law; and the law, inixs, does not : i IGOR laren ci attached to the for any ill-timed Joking, 1) inet a I exclaimed, for now all} “I want- romdway narcati see him drifting ‘nto night clubs and scanning the crowd or the familiar face of do d to lodge a complaint that 1 had} who may be out spending f been robbed and strangled until 1|tion of his profits. Or you imay 5 neeiue him watching the furtive figures in dark shadows of a rising skyscraper. You may see him in the crowds that throng a theater lobby, in the booth of a Chinese noodle resort or on the stairway of a sinister looking side- street brownston; “Do it, my wrongs came ove Copyright, 1926, N TOMORROW: A Mistake of the Law. EA Service, Inc.) | you, right on the chalk-line and theh go over to three yonder birch trees, and do your counting. When you come back you will know all about your fortune.” “Do we have to gu tvo?” Twins. “Sure!” said Oofty Goofty. So the fairyman and the Twins the rent-book and the pencil and the him, for dopedom breeds many desper- ado: f you are a good listener Joc will entertain you with thrillers that make the average western tale sound like a lullaby. ‘At “such-and-such a spot ‘h Dopey Ben and at such-and-such an- other spot he shot it out with four pocketbook down on the chalk’ line,| men. In Harlem he battled with a and wen’ id counted up to five hun-| gang barricaded i ‘oom 8! in dred in fives. Central Park his Y y came back, everything |, clump of brush. was gone. And there was anothcF note| Al of this, and much more, Mur- i ‘Don't try to follow me] phy relates, as only ap Irish tale air will turn green. Oofty asked the OADCASTING, alike. ‘only « modiewm of’ personal | faction. { ne sati | following There’s more to this story, my) {, ite way and, if] 5 And ‘his two guns are always with | s} * shot | § a man” ‘ducled from N spinner ean. Believe the tales or doubts X ‘them—the fact remains that.Broad- |} Tay FRIDAY, MAY 7. 1926 HEALTH SERVICE, THE SEARCH-FOR "YOUTH BY DR. HUGH 8.'CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service ‘The unattainable state known as re- juvenation may be approximated when right Heine is substituted for faulty health hab! ms Thus, it i¢ known that a wiscly directed medical regime at watering places, spas and springs may be pro- ductive ‘of surprising improvement, noticeable to patient and friends The changes wrought by the sub- ‘stitution of wise for improper-habits of sleep, dict ar@ egercise afford a clow to the acquisition of uniformly good health yn a ie | Reliance’ upon extra int, but utterly inconrpetent pr oo of ur- tificial rejuvenation is no’ more than a ready meats of self-deception with Satis- ‘On the other hant tion of the principles of personal hy- giene will Vina iad ‘more last- isfactory: reeults. jong as the natural longing on the part of’mankind for eternal youth and perpetual life cannot be gratified it becomes necessary to turn to less 4pectacular meany of approximating these desires. , With réasonable attention to cer- tain Well-defined and readily access- ible principles of personal hygiene it is possible to keep pace with Father Time instead of falling prematurely by the wayside. eu, bernie aes is Ss particularly important t those who desiré to enjoy hale and happy old/age lay a substantial health foundation in early life. The inevitability of old age mustehe ‘fully realized, accepted and ‘the changed conditions courageously met. When a persombecomes old, he ¢ hot expect to have his yduth restofed. He nay Se phd however, to reap the benefit of a wisely lived earlier career. Not only will euch a person grow old gratefully but he will be better prepared to mect the increased strains placed upon a gradually weak- ‘ening organism. Rejavenstion, in so far as it may be expected to come without definite per- sonal effort, is a myth. On the other sonable retention -of physical and mental vigor, may reasonably be ex- pected to follow fully lived life. way has'a “two-gun man,” as unique and colorful a personality as the plains ever produced. | As the number of violinists in¢rease ‘from year to year thé price of famous ayes mounts ‘td the sky. Ben Bernie, thé ‘otchevtra ‘teadet, tells me that every violinist in Man- hattan hopes to own an instrument made by a ‘famous maker. “But by ithe time he could save up enough money to buy one he would have to retire,” sighs Bernie. “The on \price of violins i snothing short of ree —GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) pRror COUNTY ICE OF SALE 0 : FORFEITED TO ‘On TAX Notice Is hereby glyen that the described real preperty has been forfeited to the County of Hurleigh in the State of North der, the | 2,- Comp! Se , Laws of 1925, fei taxes; that the said taken’ tax: deed to such property and will offer it for sale for cash at public auction, said sale tot held at the Court House in the Cit Rismarck said Burleigh sale will continue day to day until completed. The property listed. herein will. be sold to the highest Didder; subject to the right of the county auditor, with the approval of the ty board, to reject“any and all’ bids. description will be sold separate! _ Denerivtions 71-37 7-77 8 BV 14 = 7 of B% of SW% of E1g of SW 28-80 Swi, of SWY 10-140. M1 NW & NEW & NEY wit ce Nwh & SW PLN of NE\-18- 42-78: -35-142-81 81 N of SB% -28-143-75 | ean ‘ lo, Pp. Lots 8-9-10, Bik 56 Williams Add. Lots, 1 to 3 Willams “Add; Lot 4, 3 Willams Add. Lot 10. Willlams Add. Lots 7 & 8, iiiams Add. Lots 7 & 's Northern Pacific Ist Add. Lot B4 (Bo. 5-5/12 Fe. Sturgis Add. Lots 5 & 6, Blk. 10 Northern Pacific 2nd Add. Lot aE Northern Pacific an Add. So. 36 ft. . BIk. 37 Lot 6. BI Northern Pacific 2nd Add. Lots 7-§-9 Bk. 47 Pacific Add. 1 BIk. 49 ‘h Pacific Add. je 2nd Lots 2nd Let 1, McKenzie's Add. Lot McKenzie's Add. Lots MeKenzie's Add. Lots McKenzie's Add. Lots MeKenzie's Add. Lots 4, st haat Add. Lots 15 to 18, McKenale's Add. Lots 21 & 2: Bik. 31k. 26 MeKenazic's Ai MeKenzic's 4 MeKenale Flanne to 24, M Lot 20, it t 2, Bik 26% by Add. Lots 21 Add. Lots, 17 vy Lot 7, ik. . Bik BIk iverview iv i iverview Baldwin Townsite faldwin, Lot 5, Bik, 5 rg Ri Regan, egan Lot to an lots 15 to Regan lots 1 to 3, Regan lot 4, Bik, Regan lots 13 & Regan lot 15, BU ryan lot 16, 0 rgan Joty 6 & 7, Blk. regan tts & to Ti, BK, tegan lots Bk. 7 Regan lots Bik. 7 Regan lots ik. & Regan lots . Bik, Regan lots Rogan lots Regan lots 1 to 6 7 & 8, 0 Regan lot 10, Bi. Regan lot 18, Bik. Regan let 3. Bik. Regan lot 4, 10 10 it Wing lots 13, 14 Wing lots 16 to 2 Ww Wing lots 1 to Wing lots 1 to 1 Wing lots 15 t Wing lots 1 & Wing lots 6 Wing lots 21 to Wing lots 16, Wing lot 6, Bk. Wing lots 23 & Wing lots 1 & 2) Bik. 6 Wing lots 3 & 4, Bik. 6 wins lot 5, Bik. 6 Ving lots, 7, 8 & 9, Bik. 2, Bk. Wing lots di & 6 Wing lots 16 to Z4, bik. © Wing lot 7, Bik. 7 Wing lot 9, Bik. 7 Wing lots it & Bike 7 Wing lots 17 & 18, Blk. 7 Wing lots 21 & 22, Bik. 7 Wing lot 24, Bik. 7 she Townsite Arena lots & 24, Bik. 2 Arena lot 2, Bik, 2 nit lots 10 & 11, Bik. na lot 3, Bik. 3) a jots 1%, 11-& 12, Bik. 3 n lots 9 fo 13 Bik. 4 Bik. 4 Arena lots 1 to 10° & lot 12, Bik. 5 Given under my hand and the sen! ok eae. County this 4th day’ef May, rr + By ordore of the Bonra of County ‘commissioners of Burleigh County, North Dakota. * i J. Jehngon, Frank ct . ‘Coyaty Auditor, Burleigh EAL Coun North Dakota, First publication. on the 7th day of pay. 192 ‘swy el! - =a A THOUGHT : intecasen cate the steed te the oe eyes, so , fein mend him.—Prov. 10:36. Siu ‘The lazy man aims at nothing and generally hits Poa a Sits FLAPPER FANNY SAYS hand, prolongation of life, with rea-.

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