The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 7, 1926, Page 4

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is ; 1 Aa Newspaper E22 que gravee OLDEST NEWSPAPER smiling wearily, was glad that one, you out of the church. Feith, I wish member PAGE FOUR THE The Bismarck Tribune and freight transportation. We are laggard if we do not develop this field of endeavor and Germany has shown us how. (Established 1878) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, N. b., ec wool ft Lol postoffice George D. Mann. vy cunses President and Publisher Sabseription Rates Payable in Advance Baily ty mail per year, (in Bismarck). Deity by mot cecsite Biamarck).. dooceves Daily by mail oateste Bureau vf Circulation Employment Keeps Up q Industrial employment and earnings for October | shcwed a continuing increase as compared, with fig-| ures for September and for October, 1925, the, ‘pureau of labor statistics, department of labor, has| announced. Employment was 0.3 per cent greater) 20 than September and 0.2 per cent greater than in 6.09] October, 1925. Earnings show an increase of 3.7 5 per cent cver the previous month and 2.5 per cent! increase over the figures for October a year ago. | This report is based upon a study of 10,323 estab- lishments employing more than 3,000,000 workers | and in 30 of the 54 separate industries represented, gains in employment were reported. The per capita | earnings in all industries increased 3.4 per cent in| October as compared with September. | It is an encouraging sign, this maintenance of | the employment scale at a high level. Employment | is an excellent index of prosperity in its relation | of The Asnociated Press " The Ajeoeiated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in ‘his | per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication o' all other matter herein are also reserved. ——— Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO 2 Kresge Bidg.| with the working man. The country might easily | dined Bldg, VNE, BURNS AND SMITH lhe financially prosperous without the workers being] NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | patty prosperous. But when the: ratio of employ- | ment is high und the scale of wages is high, then the influence of prosperity reaches every strata of | society and we have a prosperous country indeed. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ; Game t the result of the} The Army-Na of true sport rejoice ; vy football game this year, which was 4 0 ‘These who had wagers on | but those who | glad. | tie score of 21 to 2 the result are of course disgruntled, like football for the sport's Editorial Comment —_| The Farmer’s Hours With a tie game there are no hard feelings and . (St. Paul Daily News) when there is a considerable score on the beards it} ‘The eight-hour day for the: farmers. shows that the game must have been an active one] °C Win. Detident of the American So- and hard fought, with little advantage on ¢ ‘ciety of Agronomy, recommends it. He hasn’t pro- ‘pcsed the five day week yet, but if his theory is correct, he may eome to that—thus lopping two days off the farmers’ present working week. The theory is this: The farmers’ troubles, financially, re- sult from cverpreduction. If they worked fewer | theurs, they'd produce less. Less production, better pric And the farmers probably would live longer. It werks out all right, on paper. But we'll wager the Master Farmers meeting in St. Paul today as guests of the farmer won't adopt it. side. : One hundred and ten thousand persons saw this nt Soldier's Field, Chicago. It wast ever to see a football game in was one of the the greutest ¢ America and the game they saw greatest in foctball history. For sheer thrills the game was a gem, @ mas- terpiece. Back and forth the gage of battle way- créd, first favoring cne team, then the other as the gridiron forces of the army and the navy fought And despite the pressure for vic- tory, it was one of the cleanest games ever to be viewed, Few penalties were exacted for fouls and there was no evidence at any time of dirty playing. Such a contest stirs the pulses and justifies the increasing publ rest in football. Baseball was formerly the king of American sports, but of late years eminence has been threatened by a game that will appeal more forcefully to the American the very center ofthe: big, some, and med hiawnell character, because it is a fighting game. It is more will spend: fiait of cath day Aisha; wilting’ < TGaW dangerous 2nd thus furnishes more thrills to specta- novel for (pulibicalicn int the ‘spring: Haw one cwill tors whese fcrebears turned thumbs down in @ xpend the remainder of each day is not known to Roman arena or cheered on bloody contestants in this commentator, but it is fervently hoped that a| 1A ra great deal of it will be passed in the galleries of| «4 peyival of acting.” Football is quickly coming into its own. New the house and the senate and rambling through the) That is what Mme. Bertha Kalich’s rules have taken much brutality from the game corridors of the many government buildings. The! performance in “Magda” ai been without robbing it of too much cf its vitality. It. nights, of ecurse, will be devoted to attendance upon called. Mme. Kalich will be seen in is a splendid game, producing real men. | celebrity chasers and the givers of receptions Sudermann’s masterpiece at the Bis- MME. KALICH “WILL APPEAR | HERE TONIGHT To Have Title Role in ‘Magda’ at Auditorium—Curtain at'8 O’Clock Sharp for supremacy pa Reef SISter What’s Behind It? (Fargo Forum) Sinclair Lewis has hied himself to Washington, there to reside during the winter with senators and congressmen, diplomats and government employes, president and cabinet, and the social elect of the teeming capital. Mrs, Lewis has leased a home in a and dinners and balls, for “Red”, Lewis himself is | "2g, Uditarum tonight. ik Li ja s ps aes fl of Bertha Lines ; quite a Lion, | Ka is somewhat like reincarna- The FOO nag am Germany is devel-} The announcement that Lewis is to reside i oc ive tueliie eas atten oping aerial transportation is truly marvelous and Washington for the winter is intriguing. Behind) nugnce and, shadings in a plaw. were deserving of sincere commendaticn. — No stone is t Icoms much that is of tremendous ‘interest. Can | sought and searched after, Yound, dnd’ left unturned to give the air system the same de-jit be that this young upstart from: Sauk Center is) brought ta-light; when, in fact, there pendability and stability as that evidenced by land, going to write the great satire of American poli-| were Maat aye Re pa Pek and water transportation. Late dispatches from,tics? If so, this commentator’s hat immediately’ in his review of the performance of Germany state that the winter rates for passenger|goes into the air, and wheh the book comes out | “Magda” jn Washington. airplane travel have been lowered until they are there will be much drum beating at Red’s booth on| slightly lower than first class railroad fare.- This cur part. ie winter some 28 lines will maintain constant service] A bang-up satire on the American political scheme| Carle the length and breadth of the German republic, has been ene of the crying reeds of this country for|the Minneapolis Journal, wi These lines will cover over 7,000 miles of routes.|ycars. ‘There has been no effort along that line] '#tive in his pr The planes to be used are of the most modern type, since the late 8s or the early 90s, and the show has| “Magan” which even being heated by hot water, the engine sagtouatt wn frem a one-ring wagon outfit to the greatest, here tonight. Other Twin City being connected in such a way as to supply this con-! grandest, most glittering seven-ring-and-ten-special- | ¢ were equally impressed by venience, trains circus in the world. The performers are eS fae eared of the production. numerable, and among them are a dozen that clown | tour, ith ann’s “Magda” with more skill and talent than all cf the great] revived and revised, But its exeel- zanies of the gay 90s. le has not been impaired. The fraction of the time formerly required for traim con-| Red Lewis is just the hey to do this satire. “Main | RAY wight have heen written yester- veyance, Street” and “Babbitt” and “Dr. Arrowsmith” hal In ‘their reviews of “Magda’ America might well take a page from Germany’s| Proved that, He has satirized American provincial. | hi time after time commented ‘on experience in the development of commercial avia-, ism, the go-getter-business methods and the medical | ‘M* | Miles Enthusiastic critic for super- of the perform- and the cast of Il present the play ne Germany now has cvery important city on some air route. One may travel all over Germany and even all over Europe entirely by airplane in a small remarkable support + ce s . 3: " Kalich. | “Sur: ded hb tion, It is nota fadit is a convenience, and soon| Profession. Signs on the horizon say he has done} ig asi BISMARCK TRIBUNE it Doc’s Annual V a play that one or two false notes might utterly spoil,” says one critic. Is Prussian Play Sudermann’s play deals with the tri young Prussian girl in the late ‘The heroine, the daughter of a strict family, if forced to live in a manner which she dislikes. She leaves home and faces the public as a singer. Soon she gains remarkable success and comes home, not neces- surily to gloat over the parents who had turned her out, but,, plainly, to show them that success is possible of ttainment_in»more than one line of Jeavor. - Success rarely comes. without a struggle certainly, not. in any of, the arts, and Bertha Kalich endured such ja struggle as few actresses of our stage know in attaining het present position of ¢minence. Her progress has been much the same that Suder- mann attributed to “Magda.” And now, after proving her ability to electrify audiences in all parts of the world, Kalich is appearing in the title role in one of the chief master- pieces of modern drama. Curtain at 8-O'cleeck = Tonight’s performance will “start promptly at 8 o'clock and those at- tending are asked to be in their seats before that hour. fae ee ORE el AT SS Othe: iti have be Hy racther cities have been equally]| At The Movies | — ELTINGE THEATRE One of the most colorful spectacles ever introduced into a screen produc- tion was filmed in the production of Vicente Blasco Ibanez’ “The Temp- tress” which opened at the Eltinge yesterday and remains for today and Wednesday in a sensational famous dance creator, Syecial light- marked this spectacle, laid in a, Pari- sian revel in the new Paris and the Argentinue. Dermott, Roy D'Arcy, Virginia Brown ; ‘ . is : |markably well cast company, Mme, it will be a necessi In America, where the dis-' the same thing for the church. The political field|Kalich is fortunately supported by of a quick, sure and efficient means of passenger | seen its worth. At least, it is hoped so. aaeagl sities Wi pcos ae | Faith assured her as she wound the! straggling hairs on a tiny hairpi I NF ana SIN NER pn Aa for you? Your new suit fits fine,| The wedding was to take place at doesn’t it?” When she finished with his black| : room and made preparatins for} string tie she sto, . ore) nine o'clock that Thanksgiving eve-| Cherry's last bath in the short, rust-| veyed her father “Adniinghe, His) | NEXT oat ning. At seven peace descended up-| stained tub. thinning pepper-and-salt hair was NEIGHBOR. on the L ne household in Myrtle} She found Cherry awake, clad in al parted. sleekly and wetly, taleum| = Street, The last of the over-fed rela-| quilted blue satin dressing gown, and| showed faintly over his cicse shave,| === OA tives had departed at six. seated on the bed, surrounded by! His, shoulders, usually bowed under) =— === = Faith had ordered all members of| scores of letters. his invisible load of care, were con-| =~ _== — the family, except “Long,” who had! of course taken Fay home and was not expected t> rejoin the family un- til they all met in the church, to go to bed for a nap or a rest before time to dress for the wedding. Cherry had borne herself gaily, “I was reading some of my old love letters,” she twisted her rea lips intu a bitter smile. “I thought I’d burn them, but now 1 dan't believe T wil? They may be all I'll—ever know—of love. Bath rea her voice chany- ed miraculous! ‘Scrub my neck nonchalantly, through the ordeal of! and ears and buck, like you used to the dinner, after having helped Faith| when I was a grubby little kid, doyally, if inefficiently, in the kitchen | honey. I--I don’t want to be alone,” all morning. During those hours of | she begged, that frightened, cornered work shared together the sisters had} look coming back into her viole:- come closer than they had been im| shadowed topaz eyes. weeks. “I'd love it,” Faith made her voice As she closed the door upon aj laugh, while her heart was breaking. night-robed, weary little Cherry,| “Doesn't it smell gorgeous?” Cherry Faith’s heart was almost bursting| wrinkled her short litle nose as she with love and pity. tested the temperature of the water “Try and go to sleep, darling. with a wary, dainty foot. have’ your bath drawn, “You help Mukgy dress first, while ‘ed with rose bath salts, at eight.|1 brush my hair and touch up my Then I'll help you dressy and you| nails,” Cherry told her sister later, ean hook me up. I'm glad you didn't| after Faith had dried the rosy little let Frances or Selma come here to| body with a great, fleecy towel. dress and help you dress, as they| But Faith found that her mother to. Now, darling, just close; had completed her dressing, and was your eyes and make your mind «| tweaking wt Joy’s short, white silk Diank. I’m going to lie down myself,| skirt with a fussy hand. but V’ll hear you if you call.” “I wish that henna-headed woman “You're so good to me, nad the| had made Joy’s dress just a mite we scientiously straightened, as if the) decent newness of his ‘inexpensive gray suit had to be lived up to. “You're @ real sheik, Dad,” she laughed huskily and kissed him. . “Your Ma’s too fine for me, in that | grand new dress of hers,” he depre- | cated. “When's George Pruitt going | to come for us?” \ ‘Half past eight,” Faith answered. I'm going to wait and go with Cher. | ry, you know. Mr. Cluny’s sendi his car for us at a quarter to nine. I've got to hutry now with my own dressing and help her dress.” “Will the flowers be sure to be| there?” Joy demanded, hopping about exeitedly on one white-slippered foot., - “I'd just die if I didn’t get to oarry| « the flowers.” “They'll be there. Good-bye, dar- lings. Don’t get fidgety if things start a little late. Weddings are al- ways late, I’ve noticed.” | A few minutes later she heard | George Pruitt’? cheerful, voice, and the flurry of and father’s and Joy’s departure. Clad only in her delicate lace and silk underthings, and with her bri SAXOPHONE. rm ind all scent- \AGAI longer,” she grumbled. “Her knees mai, r- look like doorknobs. Now, don’t tune ried po the hell to. Ganteee rete, up and cry!” she shook Joy by a és to help her finish dressing. The door was locked. “Cherry! Time‘to dress, darling. We've got to hurry.” . There was no answer. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW re her new white kid slippers, with her first all-silk white socks, cuddled against her cheek. Faith, shoulder. “You look all right. Pretty is as pretty does, and if you act half as nice as you' look, they won't put of the Lane family was en-| you'd catch up them loose back hairs the wedding wholeheartedly, | of mine with an invisible hairpin. Bhe lay in bed, tense, wakeful, ach-! And dust a little powder on the back weary, for an interminable of my neck. Do I-look all right?” the tiptasd. Ante thekath-| “You look stunning, Motheri”. WHATS THISS a 5 ag es a Geumsbonss “MR. GREEN, I HEAR Faire and other notables. [EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | Liberal reward. HERE'S HOPING 3 DON “bsensatfonel -#tage ‘sueceés ballet number directed by Theodore Kosliff, ing effects dnd glittering costumes romance of Greta Garbo and Antonio Moreno \head'a notable cast, in which is in eluded Lionel Barrymore, Mare Mc-j. : : : ; ; i Miss Garbo and Antonio Moreno tances are great anyway there is even more need| is 8 particularly rich cne, and undoubtedly he hasj?layers who throw their hearts into prove an ideal combination as the | | ing the j “TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1926 PHONE COMPANY TS INSTALLING NEW EQUIPMENT [Underground Cable Being Laid Throughout the Entire Business District The Northwestern Bell Telephone company at the pi mt time is start- of. laying. underground cable at Bismarck. Fred Ward of Fargo is supervising the work with a crew of 13 men who are at this time laying underground cable in the down town section according to F. W. Snyder, area manager at Bismarck. The new underground cable is be- the ‘new telephone exchange building rear of the new, Prince Hotel and which carries 404 pairs of wire. From the ‘intersection of Broadway and Third street to a. pole on Third street due west of the Northern Pacifig de- pot a cable is being placed carrying 101 pairs of wires. This cable is underground the com- plete distance. A new underground cable carrying 606 pairs of wire is placed from a point in front of the new exchange building to the inter- | section of Broadway and Fifth street and between Fourth and Fifth streets a branch cable will be run both north and south into the alleys feeding business blocks with rear wall cable, | j | | { | Russian enchantress and the Spanish jeneineer—one @ pampered pet of the rich who is capable of turning into! |a human tigress when love finally| comes to her; the other a man of| Nature, battling the vastness of Na-| ture in gigantic engineering prob-| lems—but unable to conquer a wom-! an’s soul. | The spectacular bull whip duel; the wreck of the great dam; the climax of the drama; these are all huge incidentals to a huge story; a | romanee that I never be forgotten by those who see it. Fred Niblo, director of “Ben-Hur,” had another gigantic task on his hands in this new. drama; his -han- dling of it was consummate artistry. » CAPITOL THEATRE Packed with thritls’ and appe: scenes, “Silence,” featuring Vera nolds, H. B. Warner, Raymond Hatton, Rockcliffe Fellowes, Jack Mulhall and Virginia Pearson, was heartily re- ceived by a delighted audience at the Capitol Theatre, yesterday. This pic- turization by Rupert Jollee. of the ft which Mr. Warner was the star, is one of the strongest film versions of a suc- cessful play seen here in many months. The story deals with a gentleman crook’s love for a daughter who was unaware of his existence. When a crime is unwittingly eommitted by her, to save her, he shoulders respon- sibility for a murder and is sentenced to death. He refuses to tell the truth even though death on the gallows awaits him, because he dared not in- criminate his child. Then follows a sensation and thrilling climax which holds the spectator as by a spell. “Silence” is indeed, a remarkable photoplay. , The work of the featured players, notably that of Miss Reynolds, who has a dual role, Mr. Warney ant eprmend Hatton, is highly artistic. you care for thrills red-Hot from he grill, you egnnot weil afford to miss. thix. tremendous phot Tom Sims Poker has been outlawed in Den- mark. The game is being promoted in various other ways, too, i | A student committee in: Boston ha ‘decided that public riots are wrong. ‘Hereafter the classmen will have to he content with mayhem on their own premises —_—- . An American ‘is reported to have paid $5,000 for the ezar’s baby rattle. Well, let us all amuse ourselves. in Our own way. | Skirts should extend two fingers below the kvee, says a Parisian de- signer. Fly’s fingers “Well, T sup- ' {| Famous last lines: u pose the best team won.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA Serviee, Ine.) —— iT” Old Masters ‘Here rests his head upon the lap of earth youth,’to fortune and to fame Le (4 unknown; Bs Fair science frown'’d not on his hum- i ble birth, | And melancholy marked him for i her own. Large was his bounty, and his soal i sincere; sgh Heaven did a recompense as largely send: He gave to misery (all he had) a tear, He gain’d from Heaven (‘twas all ~ he wish’) a friend. No farther acék his merits £0, disclos "OF danw a tealltien from thelr dread a (Thaze they alike: in, trembling hopd repose, ) : The bosom of-his Father and: hir God. : Epitaph from Elegy Writ- Chilrehgard. | at Fifth and Broadway east to Br From the new exchange building to a pole on Fifth and Sweet streets a new underground cable has been placed to carry both local and long distance wires. From the new ex- change building north to alleys be- tween Fourth and Fifth steeets and Fifth and Sixth streets north of Ros- ser an underground cable has been | placed to carry both local and long distance lines. From the intersection way and Seventh street a large un- derground cable with branch cables feeding into alleys has ‘been placed. Large feeder cables are being placed in the northern part of the town with branch cables into the alleys. These cables are being placed on either new pole lines constructed for joint use with the Hughes Electric company or on poles _now used by that company.| 70,000 Fect of Cable | The combined work means the plac- | ing of approximately’ 150 new poles | and 70,000 feet of cable and it is ex-| pected the work will take the great-/| er part of the winter to complete. Upon the’ completion of the laying] of this underground cable and the cable running through the alleys tha! larger portion of poles, wires and cables now on the niain streets will be renfoved and the wire of the tele- phones will be placed from the rear} of the buildings. The present’equipment which is be- ing used for this work consists of two Ford trucks, ahd a three-ton White Truck equipped with an arth boring machine, This truck with driver and two men completes the operation of ‘digging tWe tidle ahd setting the poles; this in itself is time saving equipment to the ‘company. There the supervision of Mr. Ward and this number will be increaseg-immediately after the holidays, to rush along the work, %% cae errs Building Finished The new exchange building insofar as the construction is concerned has been completed and at the present time temporary equipment of | the American Telephone and Telegraph company has been installed under the. supervision of Mr. Fick, foreman of this company. This will be later re- phaced by regular standard equip- iment. This is being done to rush along the completion of the trans- continental toll line of the American Telephone and Telegraph company, the business of which has been more or less congested. The Western Elec- trie company is lao making tempor- ary preparations for-the installing of the new switch bi ang plant equip- ment, but dut'to tlie that this work requires considerable time it will not be completed until some’time next spring. . - Great Amount of Good Accomplished - ‘With Seal Funds Some idea of the worthwhile work of the funds earned through the sale of Christmas by the North Dakota Tuberculosis Association m: be gained from the following facts] concerning expenditures: oe {traveling health clinic was main- tained in seven counties where doc- tors are few and where there a 10 public health nurses to help dardct the disease, Many people are getting well as a result of advice given be- fore the disease became too serior The child health education depart- ment of the Tuberculosis A: tion financed. The depa: ing placed from\a point in front of | | on Thayer street to a point in the |: are at the present time 18 men under! “ Hubby may think he han the last word—bat how long does it last? ters: Forty-five per cent of the 95 per cent remaining in the state is used in state work, The other QO per cent remains in the locality in which it was subscribed. Trees May Be Raised From Small Cuttings Cuttings are one means of propa- gating certain kinds of trees, accord- ing to Charles A. Gillett, extension forester, North Dakota school of forestry, Bottineau, “cooperating with the extension department at the North Dakota Agricultural college. “The most common trees which are raised by cuttings are the low, jcottonwood and poplag,” he’ ‘says. “Many farmers have ‘raised’ these {trees themselves. Cuttings may be | made as late as this time if ground, in which to bury them, can be found | which is not frozen. In making jcuttings ‘summer growth preferably jshould be used. These cuttings should be le about the size of a pencil or nine inches in length. For convenience in handling tie them in bunches of 50 or more (any conven- fent number) and bury hem in a pit over winter. This pit should be deep enough to allow for a three or four inch covering of earth over which straw is placed. The dirt must be closely and fitmly packed around and between the bundles to avoid air spaces which permit them to become moldy and therefore worthless. By running the dirt or sand in with water this will be avoided. “It is. a good practice to plant these cuttings in the garden for : year and then transplant them te the shelterbelt instead of sticking the cuttings in the Shelterbelt row. After the cutting is grown a year in the nursery itis cut back. The ad- vantage of a rooted cutting is that the root has a year's head start on the top.” A French professor has shown that in France, where the. population in cities almost equals that of the rural i many men of genius as has the coun- try. Piles Can Be Cured Without Surgery An instructive book has been published by Dr. A. 8. McCleary, the noted rectal specialist of Excel- alor Springs, Mo. This book telis how sufferers from Piles cau be quickly and easily cured without the use of knife, scissors, “hot” iron, electricity or any other cut- ting or burning method, withdut confinement to bed and no ital bills to pay. The method has beeu @ success for twenty-six years and in more than’ twelve thousand canes. The book is sent postpaid free to persons afflicted with piles or other rectal ubles who clip (hts item and mail it with name and address to Dr. McCleary, tans ‘Ave., Excelsior é teaches school children, by meagia of a health crusade, health habitagand | preventive measures. , desiring them. Town: with’ pub! _ Children's clinies were maintained| tubereulosis ca Visits ‘were :made to the homes of patients: who could not be cared for at the sani- tarium to show them how to help themselves and to prevent spread of the infection in the family. y Health exhibits were conducted at Jamestown, Grand Forks, Langdon, New Rockford, Carrington, Wahpeton and Ca Public health educa- tion was supported in a Urive against tuberculosis through the distribution of pamphlets, books, newspaper arti- health nasige ieee in caring for| kit cles and health exhibits. This in- cluded the,4jnancing of the Pennant, anti-tubereulpsis paper, 4,000 copies of ary Pe ‘distributed monthly. > Stncer ¢ are 750 known tubercutosis. 110 beds in rh association hopes to establish a tu- berculosis ‘elinic jin ‘every county to Insere eer. detection of - dige CRE SRB SIE OPN EEF TPM

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