The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 8, 1926, Page 4

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Rt ais PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... ily by mail, per year, “(in state outside Bismarck)...... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulation : Member of The Associated Pr The Associated Press is exclusively ent the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-j per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. fall ees entitled to All rights of republication o! other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Serer Conran YN! OMPANY waco LOGAN PAYNE C DETROIT Tower Kresge Bldg. mer BISA YNE AND SMITH | NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) , BURNS \ { i the Unfinished Business “Naturally President Coolidge goes before U “jame duck” congress with little more than unfin- ished -business. He refrains from initiating any new policies or elaborating especially on old proj- ects which were left on the calendar when congres ; adjourned last spring. ft is not surprising tHat the world court has no place in the message read yesterday. The Kansas City speech prepared the nation for that. President Coolidge has nothing really to offer until Europe de- cides whether to enroll the United States in world court’ membership under conditions imposed by the senate at the former session, A great majority of the voters sincerely hope that Europe will: relieve the Coolidge administration from more world court legislation by rejecting the senate terms. Unfortunately this congress can do little except pass appropriation bills and adjourn. So many members face retirement there is neither the de sire, zeal nor time to pass much of the remedial legislation pressing for consideration. If the na- tion gets tax relief in the form suggested by Presi- dent Coolidge and Secretary Mellon and funds are provided for the government to function until the New congress convenes that is all that can be ex- pected at the present session. Some amercment should be passed to the federal constitution that will do away with “lame duck” congresses. Before the means of transportation were adequate these short terms were necessary | that governmert might proceed until new members assembled and took office. That necessity long since has been eliminated, There is no valid rea- son why a member, of congress elected last Novem- ber shculd wait more than a year before ‘he takes his seat. This congress merely emphasizes the teed for a change. The Flag Incident One is at a loss to fully understand the great ‘wave of feeling in Germany ag: tt Baron von Maltzan, German ambassador to the United States, for his act in displaying the German flag on the embassy in Washingt.n on Armistice day and thus concurring in the general observance of that day. Criticism forced Foreign Minister Stresemann to a spirited defense of Baren von Maltzan in which he pointed out that America did not celebrate Nov. 1 as a day of victory, but a day of mourning and thanksgiving fcr the cessation of a great conflict, nd thus the Baron did only what was right and proper when he concurred in observance of the day. “The Germans cry about their “honor,” and yet how-well Minister Stresemann has put the matter. We do not, in America, celebrate a victory. We celebrate the end of a great war, dearly bought with the lives of American soldiers and the heartaches of American women. The advent of peace, the birth of a new era on earth, are the things, we cele- Irate when we observe this day. We think not of @ triumph over Germany, but of the heroism of the American boys who fought for their country and a great moral principle. ; England hoists her flag at the Washington em- bassy on July 4, our independence day, when we ¢elebrate our freedom from English domination and certainly if England can be magnanimous Germany dan do likewise. _ “What's the matter, darling? Are yaa erying? You really must hurry, the locked door and spoke softly, pityingly. If Cherry was spending those last minutes of her girlhood in lonely desolation and fear and re- morse, her sister could not find it in hhgr heart to blame her. ‘There was no answer. Something in, that absolute stillness beyond the flocked door sent a sharp, Pang of: fear through Fi it nerves. What if Cherry had no! She couldn’t do that, not ife-loving little Cherry! But Faith, @5 whe leaned dizzily against the door, remember that she had left the bot- Was covered now steadily, out of a sky. The Cluny in sight. window drapery Cherry's window- And the thermome: ning through the into the room. Cherry was not She hardly knew what she was do- ; ing when she rushed from the house, Cherry baby,” Faith leaned against/down the path to the strect, which big flakes of snow that were falling As she turned back toward the house, a glimpse of fluttering snow in the yard, she arrived at Cherry s open, lighted window. standing on tiptoe ghe could peer | Editorial Comment | Mixed Feeds (Kansas City Star) The function of livestock on the average farm i: to furnish a satisfactory market for feeds which have been grown. There is no cther way of convert ing pasture grasses and roughage into a form usefal | to the human family. Mcre than 85 per cent of:cern | harvested has to be manufactured into animal Brod: cts in order to find a ready market. Feed is not produced in the exact proportion for the most ef- ficient production of animals or animal preducts. | It is generally necessary to supplement farm grown feéds with by-products from mills and dactories which manufacture flour, starch, oil or sugar. The extensive feeder who is able to buy such by- products in carload lots to supplement his home grown feeds may not be justified in purchasing | mixed feeds. This is especially true of those whose equipment permits mixing in waclesale quantities. The large feed manufacturer has a decided advan- | | | ‘tage in buying the ingredients which he uses in) making special brands. He can buy at wholesale | highly concentrated feeds which the farmer can use | in very limited quantities. He has a further ad-| vantage in mixing by machinery designed for this particular purpose. The farmer who buys in small quantities must do this work by manual labor. There | is frequently a further saving in the delivery of mixed feeds to local points in carload rates. Deal- ers in many instances can contract for a carload of | mixed feed where they would not be able to ship in a carload of each of the by-products used. A por- tion of the savings made by middlemen in purchase, manufacture and distribution in wholesale quanti- ties is passeg on to the ultimate consumer of the feedstuff: ay It is possible to purchase well known brands from reliable manufacturers which have been mixed with the purpose of making an efficient supplement to farm grown feeds. The cattle feeder who has only corn, corn silage and a nonleguminous roughage will need an entirely different supplement than one who has corn and alfalfa or corn and pasture. The dairy cow requires a supplement of different com- position from that which is fed to fattening cattle. Hogs will utilize profitably supplemental feeds of a more concentrated nature than those fed to caitle. The feed manufacturers have made use of the! knowledge of problems in animal nutrition worked eut by experiment stations. They are not in busi- ness for one year only. They try to furnish the dairy man, poultry man, cattle and hog feeders with mixtures most efficient for various classes of live- stock. If given an opportunity they are willing to advise the purchaser intelligently in the use -f their products, Will Rogers’ Letters (Fargo Forum) Enterprising publishers have embalmed Will Rog- | ers’ “Letters of a Self-made Dipl-mat to His Presi-| dent” between the covers of a book, and it undoubt- edly will loom high on the book store shelves for the Christmas trade. It is not such a bad book fer holiday gifts, at that, but one wishes that Rogers could go into all the homes personally, instead of coming to them as a writer. On the stage, he is‘ one of the two or three great comedians cf the | country. In his own particular line, there is no| huincrist in the land who can equal him, but as a} | writer he is something else again, | ; The Will Rogers of the stage, making his homely | thrusts at everybody and everything under the sun,| jis a genius, but the Will Rogers of the typewriter, | commenting upon the international panorama, is al |very obvious fellow, straining for effect and grunt-| ing ver a belabored bit of humor. have the ¢ handed and uninspired. On the stage, he is simple, | homely and naive, but cn the printed page, he is not always at ease and very frequently far from | humorous. Occasiofally he makes an observation that is keen and funny, but they are all too rare. When they do come, Rogers seems t> be visualizing | himself before an audience and consequently in the spirit of a monolcgue. On these occasions his Per- | sonality is communicated to the reader. This hap-| pens but rarely in the whole length and breadth of the book, however. R agers’ trouble, one suspects, comes from consid- cring himself more than he is. There is no dcubt | that he is a remarkable humorist, but he is no| satirist, and satire is what. he is" straining for in| so*many Passages of his “Diplomatic: Letters.” The | satire just naturally does not come off, for it is not | {in the lariat thrower and raconteur, without a word to her mother, to| her sister who loved her and undér- | stood her, understood even the panic | which would make her. flee into’ the | snow and the night. She found it on the dresser weighted down by a nail buffer. Cherry’s hastily scrawled note, writ- ten with lead pencil on the back of an old envelope addressed in: Chris Wiley's bold, black, dashing hand- writing. “I'm running away, Faith. Tell Mugeys!'ll be aii right. Don’t worry. I couldn't do it after all, Faith. He was so old! Please don't try to fol- low me. Give me.time to yet away or I'll kill myself. Love, Cherry.” And across the envelope was a childish ‘row of crosses, made with with the feathery,” n almost windless limousine was not caught her eye, -open! Wide open! ter at thirty! Run- six inches of soft By in the room. On | undergo another operation. tle of bromide tablets on the dresser, after giving Cherry a mild dose to agiet her nerves. “Cherry! Cherry! You're scaring mg to death!” she cried sharply, ra‘ tling the knob of the door despe: ly, here was no answer. Faith, panic- ai in, dropped the lovely golden- bridesmaid dress to the floor etd flung her weight against the Ceriy! minute! vias still was no answer. only her mother and father or As ghd these to. help her. But 4n the church by this time, Resting it in George's swift car. iffeur who was to call 4 ~ 's Cherry! Open thig-door the floor, on one of the small rose- colored chenille rugs, lay a little pool of fire and snow—Cherry’s rhinestone-and-pearly - embroidered wedding dress. And’ across a chai: back drifted the feather-light cloud of Cherry's wedding veil. But there was no bride to wear them. The wedding dress was in a little round heap—as if Cherry had put it on, and had then let it slip to the floor and had stepped. out of it. 3 Faith’s first reaction from numb- ing horror was one of heart-cluteh-| quick, heavy slashes of the pencil. Torn between her. love for Cherry, which dictated -that she heed the frantic girl's plea to give her a chance to get far enough away to elude pursuit, and her instinct to ery out for help, because she knew that she could not. trust her own judgment in such a crisis, she moved almost mechanically to the telephone and called Bob Hathaway’s number. After what seemed an age of wait- ing without a’ response, she realized that Bob undoubtedly had left for his ing relief. At dead. She had fled. But si dead. Her second reaction was one of almost insane joy that somehow]! wh Cherry had cheated the altar of the sacrifice of her growing youth. ‘Any- uncle's house, for it was he who was 5 escort the aged bridegroom to the chu ‘ She had just hung up the receiver en came a ring at the door, flew to answer. chauffeur of which the s Demand Heavy For Chrysler Cars in Pacific Territory, reflection of the phenomen- ler, cars reported tutes recently is. seen in the official figures on motor car registrations in September for the fornia. These, how Chrysler leading all au- tomobile manufacturers for the month, and so far ahead of the sec- | ond entry as to be in a class of its own. “More Chryslers were sold in Sac- ramento during September than any other make of motor car, without ex- ception,” said H. O. Harri: i dent H. O. Harrison compan ler distributor for Sacramento, in commenting on the official report. “It is indisputable proof of Chrysler! merit, and as Sacramento acknowl- edges it so do motor car buyers every- where.” Chrysler officials have been receiv- ing similar reports from many sec- tions throughout the country and find in them corroboration of factory figures which reveal an unprecedent- ed activity in sales, production and shipments during nt weeks, In October of this year Chrysler reached tthe highest shipment point in the company’s history, 22,124 cars being plant record, and represented a gain of 61 per cent over October, 2926, ———____,_ se ‘NEWS BRIEFs __ ||: Physicians attending King Ferdin- and of Rumania, announce he must Jules E. Mastbaum, president of the Stanley company of America, operators of the largest chain of mo- tion picture theatres in the world, dies in Philadelphia. Senator Bruce, Democrat, Mary- land, warns in senate that prohibition ts blighting human happiness end i His menologues| shipped from the plant. This was 19) s of personality and spontaneity in| per cent above the total for the pre-| them, but his writings are too frequently heavy-| ceding month, which was the former! ; Senator Shephard, Democrat, Texas, replies that Volstead law contributed greatly to prosperi New York banking group headed by id J. and W. Speyer and company, Seligman and compiny, obtain option on controlling interest in ‘Talking Machine company of Cam- den, N. J. New York city board of aldermen s Mayor James Walker's curfew requiring night clubs to close at am. Minn—Ira A. Cox, D., road contractor ¢ by grand jury on a stat- utory charge. Fergus Falls, Sioi S Minneapolis—Henry A, @efeated Democratic éongress in 10th district, was found @ead from illuminating gas. poison- ing. . Oil Is Developed That Won’t Thin Out Gonstant viscosity of oil in the crankcase, with no dead batteries, scored cylinders and damaged bear- ings on zero mornii oil before the engine warms or from thinned oil after it heats up, is the revolutionary discovery announced y the Standard Oil Company of In- diana in placing on the market a new and unique line of motor oils to be known as ISO. . The new oil is unique in a really literai’ sense, for.except that it is a petroleum product it bears no rel: ionship whatever to other moto: cils now on the market, either those of the Standard Oi] Company or of any other compan: Its preparation is based on what is known in the chemical-engineering world “theory of equilibrium, dilutio: Is. which is almost as stunning in faet | as it sounds—never until now applied to the practical manufacture of mo- tor lubricants. The practicability of such applica- tion after three years of intensive’ reported by Picturization of So-{8uccess of the si research was first St@ndard Oil scientists to the EVERETT TRUE HEY, CEMHE TAKS YouR MaFecR 4 EversttT— L WANT TO SSC sometHne.t! — ‘SECOND, has Victor Finlayson, candidate for es from “frozen” f ISO” leiety of Automot their annual meeting last winter, and published in the February number of that association’s Journal; but sibilities been revealed sto the lay- man and the motorist. For a year following its laboratory develop- ment, the Standard Oil Company of Indiana has subjected it to a prac- tical test by. making use of the new oil in the company’s great fleet of trucks and salesmen’s curs. It. occurred to the men in the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) laboratories that since the oil in the crankease can be ‘diluted only up to a certain point, and that since a suf- ficient heavy oil after 150 to 200 miles of driving s this point and gives perfect. 196 tion, if. the cil could be brought to. equilibrium in the refinery, it ‘would give perfect lubrication from the very moment of starting, and thereafter until drained from the crankcase, for it would have a constant viscosity and therefore a constant efficiency, affected only by diluent. After three years of intensive re- search and practical experiments on jits own great fleet of automohiles, {the Standard Oil Company of Indi- ana‘ finally developed such an oil, of constant viscosity and constant ef- ficiency, regardless of how cold the weather, from the very moment of starting up to the point: when its ef- ficiency, like that of any oil, may be affected by accumulations of dust {and dirt. Its name ISO-VIS, indi- ates this — “Constant Viscosity’ — from the Greek meaning “equal” and “VIS” being a contrac- tion of the word “viscosity.” At The Movies | o——______ _—_______ CAPITOL THEATRE * Proving itself one of. the most melodramatic pictures seen here this season, “Silence,’ under the pers: Cecil B. DeMille, was’ presented be- fore highly-interested audiences at the Caiptol Theatre, yesterday. This tis a thrilling underworld picture in hich Vera Reynolds, H. B. \Warner, Raymond Hatton, Rockeliffe lowes, Jack Mulhall and Virginia All acquit ir respective rt | themselves finely in ade the result being Nsatisfying. The story-is » good one and the various dramatic episodes follow each other with thrilling ¢f- feet. Don’t miss this picture. ELTINGE THEATRE Many inquiries have been received regarding “Stella Dallas” which comes: ‘to the zi and. Saturday indicating much inter- est in this fine pictarization of the famous novel by Mrs. Olive Higgins * Prouty. 1 The, management recommends “Stella Dallas” as one film that will live in the memory after it is seen. It is great in story, cast. and superb e Engineers at| not until now have tis manifold pos- | accumulations of dirt and not byy tinge for ‘Phuriday, Friday | ‘in, its heart-wringing . ‘Stella Dallas” has bad an amasing vogue as a populer story, then as & novel, and later as a “stage play in Most Beautiful of Gems FEW people give thelr diamonds, however valuable, the care they bestow on many possessions of far less value. At regular in- tervals your automobile is looked over as a measure of precaution and economy. One's pride again would Bot permit the covering on the fur- niture at home to become shabby. By @ curious freak of habit, the is sadly neglected. | impatred by sich neglect. proper care of | the process with dire results. | sure thelr bdrilflai.cy, stervals by an experteneed eye. \pear slightly dutied. iv'ng glass reveals a President Submits Budget Calling For 16 Million More (Continued from page one) constitutional duties of the president and the congress ymake any other course indefensil While proposing Sexpenditure ‘of the $75,000,900 auttovined by con- gress for road ¢onstruction, Mi Coolidge: renewed his.’ recommenda confining its activities to tion only of primary or highways ‘and leaving to ‘téites*the development of secondary routes. The president also asked congress to give early consideration to a per- manent merchant marine policy and to the disposition of: alien prop- erty and scttlement of American and German war claims, a. problem now holding the attention of the house ways and means committee. The increase of $12,000,000 for the veterans’ bureau,, making the total for this offite $475,400,000° for the next year, ‘involves principally an increase for military and siaval com- pensation. - Counting compensations to the wars, the total carsied i for vetera relief ig, "Navy % Aside from: the. 000 reduc- tion in interest on the public debt, the largest. si rease in the in the allotment for the navy. The program provides the decommis- sioning of ¢ ing a consid maintenance, urtailment of more than ‘in the amount to be spent for major alterations of. vessels. - jig department figures seaxeate. of $6,169,012 scat- among’ the manifold activities over which the department has supervision.” ‘The budget bureau itself sets an example off $700, from its annual expenses, d|There is s decrease of $370,000 in the amount set, aside for collecting} ,; internal revenue; a déctgase of $600,000 . for of; excessive customs duties; “and a detfease of, $514,810 for the bureau of engraving and printing, °°“ ' The coast guard, however, receives increases totaling more than $2, 500,000, for:new vessels and for gei eral expenses, | The treasury esti- mate doesnot: include the $20,000,000 which the administration expects to spend during the . year for public buildings throughout. the country. : Other ou Decreases Decreases also are shown in the totals for the state and labor depart- ments, but they are due to the fact that last yer special appropriations were: made for both of thi depart- ments — $5,000,000 to the state de- which Mrs. Leslie Carter starred. The | pa ; theme is already known to millions ‘for its distinction end power. Striking the keynote of ronsance, ‘Stella Dallas” on the screen, bares Va girl in love with love. F amorous nature, her. marriage, her peecadillos, and vividly visualizes ‘the heights to which Stelle rose and the depths to which she fell. It is ; romance, ee with laughter and life is iteelf: The Miaiee ot “Stella ” ie gad as posted fn the 1928 budget, e largest ‘ine! neaaee folds | 755,288 for the interior: ; cover Soe bigher an for the post office department, to ” diamond end appearance and safety of diamonds; consist, as many ple imagine, in rubbing them fl cosa i in. @re neglected, perhaps months lat- tervals to remove the accumulated |¢r. @ sudden jar may loosen the | dirt. The unskitted hand does little! to restore their brilllancy, and 1s | Ukely to weaken the settings in are negative. If danger threatens, As‘ however, the teeth of the setting @ precaution against loss and to as- are skillfully straightened and once diamonds’ more clasp the gem as securely a8 should be examined at regular in-|ever defying accident. Irom tne dee: new budget isin: drop! of $9,246,475 | ¢ Diamonds Surprisingly ‘Neglectec perhaps & cavity beneath the gr of j filled with extrancous matter, th {accumulation of months or even ‘years, Now the cleaning of a dia-~ ‘mond ice and & ‘to the very-base of the troub! j The complicated settings in vogue, today tender such attention the | more important. some of the diamonde‘cut from it. . The jeweler’s glass, again, reveals the slightest wear in the setting. ‘The brilliancy and charm of dia-: One of the teeth securing the stone monds in all forms of Jewelry ts May. be ever #0 slightly out of The; alignment, or # tiny crack may be iamonds' does not! discoverel, a warning of future danger. If these signs of weakness ond and It is irretrievably lost. Many examinations of jewelry skillful cleansing the diamond re. When the jeweler screws the gains its original charm. With in, ‘familiar magnifying glass to his tefligent care.the youth of dia. ‘eye and examines: your diamond, tmany things are revealed to him.; through the lifetime of, the pos. ‘To. the casual -cye: the diamond sessors, and may be handed down irom months of exposure may ap-!from generation to generation in The magni-|safety with their, brilllancy un. film of d'n, impaired. ‘monds is constantly renewed creasing cost of the continuing pro- gram of forest “road construction. The amount set aside for endowment of agricultural experiment stations under ‘the Purnell act is increased $480,000, of which $10,000 goes to each state. The allotment for erad- ication of tuberculosis in animals is- increased from $4,653,000 to $5,- 853,000, and there is an inerease from $710,000 to $1,000,000 for cooperation with the states in forest fire protec- tion under the Clarke-McNary act. A $4,607,583 increase for the de- partment of commerce is lurgely de- voted to the work of promoting com- mercial aviation under the new law. The allotment. for-air navigation fa- cilities jumps from $300,000 for the current year to $8,219,500 for next year. The bureaus of foreign and domestic commerce, census, stand- ards, and fisheries; the patent of- fice, and the lighthouse service also receive smaller increases. . MILL CASE TO BE PRESENTED IN WRITING (Continued from page one) ‘on the pire of the ‘state, mill and elevator association; that it should be placed on the same plane with regard to rates and transit privileges the termi in the. Twin Cities and Duluth. .The Grand Forks property can bandle material in transit at less cost. and quicker than Twin City, and Duluth term- nals, he said, so that granting it ‘a transit privilege would cost the’ rail- roads leas than similar privileges granted to its Twin City and Duluth Semper. ania . At the conclusion of oral i "that with-¥ ments Judge Coffey directed briefs on the case be submitted in 15 day THE NAME:TELLS A TRUE STO! The very name, clipping} v in healing, the 4 ssing cause. Be- it alone combines the curativ: of pure Pine: Tar and other’ awake’ nights, - resister cough méiicines, but quietly! to, your good: Compqund. ‘mended it.” ‘Foley's Honey and Tar ~ iy Ask for it. —ady. pag additional salaries and provide, | for additional facilities to handle the inereased volume 251,340 for the. coriae

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