The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | | } } | | | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | | Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at arck as second class mail matter. 3 George D. Mann........ . President and Publisher i Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by c: ier, per year ..... 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bis 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... + 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.... 6.00 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press _ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to fhe use for republication of all news dispatches eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local néws of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all @ther matter herein are also reserved. — i i : Foreign Reptesentatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY 5 CHICAGO DETROIT fower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. 3 PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH te, NEW YORK - - : Fifth Ave. Bldg. = (Official City, State and County Newspeper) Compensation Inadequate Adequate compensation for members of the leg- islature should be provided before another session - Folls around. The limit of $5 a day is not suffi- “iH cent to meet the expenses of the legistator and cer- | fainly is not a fair compensation for the time given the state during the sixty-day period. It was indeed unfortunate that the voters de- feated this legislation at the polls. There are many ways in which savings can be made in the way of te expenditures to increase salaries of state offi- : North Dakcta’s pay roll is very modest com- fered to what obtains in other states of this size. “The members of the legislature have acted wisely 1 { putting the issue before the people of the state, * and effort should be made at the 1928 elections to ut the proposition over. & R Silent Diplomats Abroad The advance guard of the American Legion, which holds its 1927 convention in Paris in September, is a its way. up-sntirely of tree seeds, the germs of Douglas firs, They will rear their stature and stand as symbo!s on the battlefields of the world war. 5 Hundreds of pounds of ‘the seeds are being to Great Britain, France, Belgium and Italy as mes- sengers of goodwill from the American (9; Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the Ai Tree asseciation, sew the chance to help reforest ‘ the area: A meric t ten years ago. Lord Lovat of the British Forest Commission, M. q Sartiges, charge d’affaires at the French embassy, and the forestry departments of Belgium and Italy | cable their thanks. American seeds sent these | countries in recent years have turned out well, with | the-result that millions of these trees already are thfiving in the war-torn areas of countries that the | American Legion will visit in September. | "The trees are silent diplomats abroad, and an ef-| feetive forcign policy. | De The Sting of a Strike The sting of a strike carries far. Besides its lo- cal effects, a strike’s influence often is felt in quar- | ters remote from its source. An instances- | The maximum cost during the fall of 1926 of mov- | ing a bushel of wheat from New York to Liverpool! | ‘was 24 cents. In former years the rates during the | August-November periods were much lower. The! reason? The British coal strike was the reason. There | was great demand for ocean tonnage to move coal | into Great Britain. Thus, the action of the miners | H of the United Kingdom resulted in a higher cost for | wheat, and higher wheat means higher bread. * As a consequence of the falling off in shipments | during that period, stocks of wheat piled up in| f+‘ Warehouses in exporting countries, according to the | | food research institute of Stanford University. Im- | i ‘porters, looking ahead toward lower freight rates, 4 | bought sparingly. Western Europe drew more ‘wheat from southeastern €urope than it ordinarily | would. | But, as a result of this situation, farmers in America profited. The United States marketed ‘early in the summer when prices were fairly sound. The winter wheat crop, which is harvested carly, was abundant. - A decline in wheat prices is always the result of ., ® surplus. But prices here are fairly secure be- fause a large portion of our export surplus was moved before Dec. 1. , These are a few of the reasons why men, sitting “around a ticker, begin to get busy as soon as there’s mews of a strike, be it in Great Britain or China. “A strike is felt a long way. Interstate Power = The growing insistence that the federal govern- Ment enact rules that would regulate interstate transmission of power must have suffered a pe {ceptible sctback in the published opinion of - retary of Commerce Herbert Hcever, who is against { ‘such action. It is the secretary’s stand, and very H Properly taken, that such regulation is and should { ‘remain the privilege and duty of the individual | jptates, using their power of interstate compacts. | It is a method of regulation of many affairs that has been rather neglected, yet it is far superior in veffect than is the federal control with its rapidly sphere of influence. One cannot well see the federal ‘hand shall cease tu spread its | Fingers and grasp every vestige of power from the "Bove states through which it has its being. Day | day the federal authorities usurp the powers and | pes of the states, with the result that we are becomn! @ bureaucracy instead of a democracy. Pa ymin our government is increasing to an extent and it is a bad omen for the con- of the cooperative it now turning to.as the many of the ills which have manifested will act without delay. “The advance guard travels in sacks, and is made +! | advance diversification has made in the . post-war | |the value of North Dakota’s dairy products has | | third more creameries than in 1921, and nearly! | as yet been scarcely scratched! | of Christmas shoppers about, stole $79,000 from a discourage the federal government in its constant | reaching cut for more and more power. The states | still have time to protect their sovereignty if they Money and True Love In most of cur romantic novels, and many of the other kind, money almost invariably is represented | as the chief thing needful to make the course of true | love run smooth. | Gold furnishes the plot for many stories. The struggles of Herbert or Leon or Ernest to lay away | enough money so that he can marry Gertrude or Emma or Allene—that is the crux of many a ro- mantic tale. Accordingly, it seems rather out of order to suggest that the poor man’s son cften can wed the girl of his choice much more easily than can the| rich man’s son. But so it is. Consider the case of young Michael Cudahy, ear-old son of the fabulously wealthy packing house family. Cudahy was enamored of a movie-actress. The two started out to elope. But the elopement ran on the rocks and they are still—perhaps permanently, —unmarried. Cudahy’s mother telephoned or telegraphed every marriage license bureau in California warning them that the son was under age. So wherever he went the license clerks gave him the cold shoulder. Suppo: he had been a poor lad;, what then? Would several hundred dollars have been spent to block his marriage plans? No; he would have been; able to duck into the nearest courthouse, unhindered, | and make the young movie actress his bride with- | cut hindrance, Money helps—sometimes. But sometimes, young Cudahy might testify, It proves an insur- mountable barrier. ° a The Radio: Situation } Day by day the radio broadcasting situation gets worse instead of better as the proponents of varie | ous measures in congress growl at each other and refuse to get down to real brass tacks in a com- promise, regulatory measure that would give some relief for the chaotic conditions now obtaining. ‘The ceneral public is unable to understand the lelay. Ne explanation yet made seem: to bear the narks of complete truth and th? general thought at behind the reluctance to adequately care for | nation, there lurks some unsavory condition. | this in mind rad'n fans are becoming yationt with the lack of definite action. Editorial Comment | North Dakota to the Front (Minneapolis Journal) sing agricultural diversification upon North | Dakota is a Ict like pointing out to a dairyman the | jing little girl, slip THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE a moment outside the of the room had died, while he copferre moment ‘with the interne and nurse who were keeping vigil wi the thin. When he opened the door, the nurse, a slim, bobbed-h: of her starched skirt: past the dled group at the door. about death, how much healthy-look- ped, with a rustle hud- Even in her she really dvantages of producing milk and butter, or tell-| cared that her patient had died so ing a poultry farmer that there is money in mar- | keting chickens and eggs. Fer North Dakota herself long ago saw that her agricultural salvation lay in diversification, and the | swing away from the one-crop system has been go- | ing on steadily ever since the war ended. It has been nearly a decade new since North Dakotans de. pended primarily on their wheat crop for their ma: terial well being. | We are indebted to the Greater North Dakota as- sociation fcr some graphic statistics illustrating the | yéars. Of the state’s 304-million-dollar farm crop in 1926, wheat accounted for only 90 millions. Since | 1919, the alfalfa acreage has nearly trebled, while sweet clover acreage has increased twenty-fold. Alfalfa and sweet clover are transmutable into beef and milk and butter and cheese, Since 1921.) risen fifty per cent, with each-year showing a steady gain. The income from hogs has tripled, the reve- | nue from beef is a third higher, the mutton and wocl income has quadrupled, and the poultry and | egg income has more than doubled. There are a! twice as many cream stations. | The Greater Ncrth Dakota association is con-| servative, we believe, in forecasting for the state an annual aggregate of a billion dollars in agricul- tural revenue within the next decade. Nor is North Dakota’s future prosperity solely | dependent upon the looking up of agriculture. Whiie eastern states have been talking of the possibility. of transforming coal into power at the mine-mouth, our neighbor to the west has gone to work and done that very thing. Two large plants were built in the heart of the lignite fields in 1926, producing elec- trical power that is carried to more than a third of North Dakota. bia And here is a state whose great resources have | Back to Jesse James (Watertown Daily Times) | Modern bandits are invading the territory of Jesse James. Six staged a holdup on one of the} busiest corners of Kansas City, Mo., with thousands bank messenger and escaped in a stolen automobile. Tt was done quietly, without a word being spoken. Jesse James and his crowd did not operate in the cities, They preferred the wide Open spaces, holding up a stagecoach and getting a few hundred dollars, and at comparatively rare intervals riding into a small town and holding up the bank. And when they escaped they escaped on horseback, rid- ing to their hiding-out places and when necessary fighting off a posse. 5 j One sympathizes with the Detroit police official who ordered his patrolmen not to refer to these Present day holdup men as bandits. That. term, “he said, belonged to the days of the old west, when there was romance connected with a masked bandit holding up a stagecoach and rifling the the Passen- gers. The bandits cf those days, he said, had some sense of decency. They did not shoot down un- armed people, they did not slug men from behind suddenly and so dramatical three who had lov Lane becau: and had served for many fore heart trouble and diabetes turned plaining semi-invalid, took had mn The mass of pillows w necessary to make breathing able, had been discard first time in years, Faith sa smooth pillow beneath gray-haired head, precision of “Don’t ery begged, as hospital Junior in rough, hard gasps, stroked cold, serene forehead wept, Faith saw the shown her an arm flung great, breast, telling her see: out childish g —Cherry had—and who had killed her mother. Cherry ‘really a murderess the other children put together, refle bitterly, But Cherry loved her—thut after all, was thi portant thing. Yes —-an We OTHER MARR Go ARM IN Abways!! had her into a qucrulous, com-fishe?” he each | other’s hands and advanced on tiptoe |to the bed where they had laid her. been fort- y her mother lying almost prone, only one | “Martha—I'll The covers—oniy | the a sheet and counterpane were need- | husky, ed now—were folded back across the | the very sound of that be' broad boson with the mathematical | could stir thos ii bedmaking. | , daughter,” Jim Lane | Lane achieves fame by dying. — | leaned against the curved | IN NEW YORK | iron headpiece of the bed and cried, | @———__®* as his hand the graying hair from the as she; ‘at, too. | dropped the final “h,” spoke through one corner of the mouth and wagged ‘aith flung herself down by the bed and laid her head for the last time on her mother’s breast. While his mother lived, Junior had only an occasional shy affection—a hasty kiss on the chegk, carelessly about her fat shoulders. And in all her | i ith had never sat in her moth- | er’s lap and cuddled her head on her} or sobbing | But Cherry had it was Cherry Wasn't now? Cherry, who had loved her mother, had given her more trouble than al e “OQ, Mother!” Faith's wailing sob wonT Get WKE 1ED PEoPLE -AcT Rue an’ INATIENTiVE, wil we, We UW ARA am SINNER Dr. Atkins asked them to wait for door | in which Martha Lane for a of utter grief and remorse rose to a tensely quiet room. Fath.” way, standing manded her suddenly. ing yourself ill. er for your fa , too. Faith rose unsteadily, with the of Bob's arn toward her jswent out m Jim fled, than hers, | which life ha words now for the grief which he di 1ooks, thwarte natural, articular. ighty pretty girl. this time the word w Martha—” s spoken to dead ears, as he shuffled to the bed, and looked down upon the face of For the|the woman with down he had lived twenty-three years, for more than dull voice, as if TOMORROW Eight’ avenue. d When you mentioned it deville_toughs. And Eight’ than on innocent passers-by. times have changed. street cries of push-cart peddlers, live down its reputation. In Boo Hatha- just behind her, com- “You're mak- And making it hard- and turned blindly e Lane’s arms ally to receive her, Ways inarticulate, humble, he had no ich had come into don't Sa But he thought New York, Jan. 22—It used to be enue was as tough as rt of a peak of a fan- ion of the old “Hell’s j ” where gang funerals were | brewed and in a day when gangsters used their guns more on cach other The toughes part of the “kitchen” now echoes ti 1] the unmusical And Eight’ avenue has started to fact, like the gamblers with| beauty of grace. Well Go Airm iw Arm | We Need a New Bucket } | a yast who went into the gold ca { it wants to change its name. } The new subway is to high wth rocks. Seventh. aia | Place among the business streets. ; ; ¢ her, | dozen wrote in that it was just about |gret, Faith could not keep from! but his doy ring eyes did not wondering, in a detache sentfal | leave h face, Tin, face] vie, SAG Naw OXeRk NERY a MEin wi what the girl y thought| was grayer, more like clay from “ Al- Py | America. Martha! rarentiv accented. as he had accepted ee she belonged to them every tragedy wi cars, be- bu from the gangsters belt, Ei border of the old section of her shops, tawdry clothing sach, Suddenly a second-hand do my best for the| ‘Tict appears to be followed by a 1 ii Sie ” Greek quarter wherein “coffee clubs” the neat: | te oor terry ye iP hic | display their Greek letters from the window panes. Again it tumbles ter buildings westward. GILBERT SWAN. you mi ‘With one small nk, no jokii When <a to play roy ha r lound = the y roken. But Remembering without r work of faith and wel Thess.’ the labor Faith is the champion of love the nurse; Turu Life —watkine SIDE-6Y SIDE —> AN : blame.| Night and day the ground hogs bur-| row beneath its surface and above; the cranes screech in the frosty cold{ and lazy wagons come and go heaped Eighth avenue will go the way of As the new subway line nears completion in the course of years skyscrapers and natty business places will come and it will take its; Recently, when suggestions for a new name were invited, at least a That would be a final blow to the Manhattanites who have delighted in poking fun at all the Main streets of As it stands now. long since freed hth ave- st the Green- wich Village and plunzes toward the uptown belt. it runs for a distance as a welter of antiquated looking stores ~~ is- into the out-} skirts of the Broadway playbelt, pick- ing up a medicine show, a few cheap movies, but hinting of a new day when Broadway will have overflown its banks and swept attractive thea- (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) ——___ + | Justajingle \a left hand, after the fashion of vau-| Wee wie pleased the neighbors | "A THOUGHT easing of nce, and but humility-is the TI i SATURDAY | Events of the Week Ahead Brotherhood of Reilroad Trainnten ..... Knights of Columbus, St, Mary's Hall .. Lions. Club, Grand Pacific Hotel..... —__—$ $$ 24 i Girl Reserves, Presbyterian ch City Commission, City Hall 0. 0. F. Canton, I. 0. 0. Pythian Sisters, A. 0. U. W. Hi Kiwanis Club, Grand Mothers Club, Mrs. Miller .... 25 I. 0. 0. F. Subordi | ‘Lady Foresters, St. | Masonic Chapter, Yeomen, A. 0. U. W. Hall ... Rotary, Grand Pacifie Hotel . Current Events Club, Mrs. Lar Wednesday Club, Miss Marion American Legion, A. 0. U. W. Thursday Musical Club, Mrs. Company “A”, City National Degree of Honor, A. 0. U. W. Royal Neighbors. 1. 0. 0: el . Hi phian Society, Etks Hall . Rebekah Lodge, I. 0. 0. F. Hel Bismarck Study Club, Mi | Monday Club, Mr: City Commission, Schrunck ‘ Ed Schuh is garage in Bismal Monday. friend Anton Novy on evening. Chris Heins on Tuesday evening. George Schuh, Thursday. i Wing on Friday afternoon. Thursday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Jake Hartman. better at tl writing. Mrs. Jacob Roth and two | | her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Witt. good. Chas., Henry and Herman Seilinger, Wing on Tuesday, Jake Hien’s Sunday afternoon. Steve Bacl Carl Johnson’s on Sunday. John Cook and wife and 'Emi Schuckmere Jake Wents’ Marchants on Sunday evening. Sunday evening. on Sunday evening. other meeting on W. ing especially for the children. All to attend these meetings. Mr. Hitch. man is the instructor and leader. Harold 4 E. M. No! ‘on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. John Fode and son were shopping in Wing on Friday. Mrs. Chri with them. Mr. and Mrs. M. Matz visited until Monday evening. ! Wild Rose and Ellen Peterson and | Daughters of America, St. Mary’ I. F. Hal jal. Pacific Hotel ines Professional Wome: . Business & Professi ta ane Pai ry’s Hall. Masonic Te’ Fortnightly Club, Mts. Meyer : | American Legion Auxiliary, diet bs Fe ‘ Lions Club. Grand Pacific Hotel Emiel Schockmere visited with his Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Hindbouch visited at Nolan visited with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Philip Pearl White was shopping in Mr. and Mrs. George Mauch spent ‘Mr. and Mrs. Hartman’s baby is on | the sick list this week, but is a little Mrs. Herman Seilinger and little son have been at Jim. Walter's for a few days while Mrs. Walters is do- ing some sewing for Mrs. Bellinger. little daughters returned to her home near Tuttle after visiting a few days with The dance at Fodes Saturday night | Hi! was well attended and enjoyed by all present. The George Bailey children furnished the music, which was very | J. E. Witt and Paul Bennett were in| While Mr. and Mrs. Chris Hien visited at ir and family visited at est Saturday visiting at John Fode and J. E. Witt visited at Manuel Fode‘ visited at Neiter’s on’ The Bible class: met at John Cook's A large crowd was in attendance, There will be an- Ydnesday evening if the. weather permits.. On Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock will be a meet- children and adults will be welcome | ¢j erry's| sitce Christmas, is Henry Hein’s niece is spending their folks from Saturday morning Mr. Harry Koenig of Braddock visited| d, Be Homer Brown a while over the week- eee "at the He rd end. The 10th grade pupils, Misses Lilly Martha and| chi Bernite Gosney, of school No. 1, are °. Lig pel ees , JANUARY 22, 1927. wastes > S33ssass urch pari a 0 90 9 Ba sesshssssss See 33 Org rg OT Ogg te neg Urge ng fy 3 k Building . on 338 3 oro a ee $9 Roons oe 3 SEEEEEEE 33 my NEWS OF OUR NEIGHBORS taking the state examinations this week. Havard Balk,,the dairy superin- lent, made his regular monthly ni inten John and Manuel Fode visited with | cai! at the Ernest Saville farm, Sat- Leroy Marchant on Tuesday: evening.| urday, going to work in a ck, beginning next Word received from Frank Elliott, states he enjoyed the holidays very much visiting his mother’s sister and other relatives in, Illinois, who have not seen Frank since he was a boy. Mfs. Olaf Feltherin, of Braddock, who has been staying with her daughter, Mrs. John Peterson, dur- ing the latter’s illness, returned to her home Thursday. A carload of our Sete ? folks at- tended the dance at Moffit Friday evening. .| Mr. and Mrs. Nels Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Saville were en- ined Sunday, in Braddock at the Henry Sonn home. | Friends here of Henry Reaman of Hazelton, who owns and manages the Wild Rose telephone line, will be sorry to learn that he is very ill in a hosiptal at Bismarck. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Carlisle had as Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brownawell,' Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brownawell, and Haner Brownawell, ty Koenig of Braddock, and 8 hal Erickson and Helen Ada Saville and brother Lee, e attending high school in k, and boarding in town the roads are so rough, spent the’ week-end at home. bs M Helen Skramstad spent the Bradd Erickson. rd Johnson, who has ben tak- yt i tment in a hospital at Bis- me home last week some- proved. Mrs. Ernest Saville attended’ the Ladies Aid in Braddock Saturday aft- ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Gooding enter- tained Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Browna- well and son Homer and Miss Helen Erickson at a delightful 7 o'clock dinner Wednesday evening. Whist was the diversion of the evening. ed the benefit dance at Braddock Il Friday evening and report a fine ime. -| Mrs, John Peterson, who has been quite ill the past week, is able to be ave! up and around again. Miles Stanton, who has been ill back teaching school No. 2. Mrs. Sam Tracey of Braddock substituted for him last week, Homer Brownawell hel; his brother Havard deliver et, in Braddock Thursday. Friends here will be sorry to learn that Miss Opal King, one of our for- mer Wild se girls, is ill the home of her parents in Bismarck, and her Thelma Rand, is ry Place near Bismarck. and Mrs, Baxter and little pleasant loward Brownawell home Monday evenii Mr. and Mrs. Ss, B: Gooding and day visitors at the With all Nicaragea, fears this yi West Point th. tate ent ‘ou never can tell! again. But th better look out- been found. : He lo: ‘two $20 bills on them. John D. Rockefeller a Sunday ‘school papil ago, kingdom by the sea, a maiden you may know | By the name of Annabel Lee. And this maiden she lived other th Than to love In That ought ‘and be lived by me She was a child ! vet and 'l was a J In this kingdom ‘by the sea; But we lover with: a love thi more than love— my Annabel Lee, a Usd Mo “the seraphs of” heave: Coveted her and me. ~ T and With In this By Tom Sims: Guantanamo is all worked up. the warships, going to the convention burcau uba won't get the maneuvers — The world’s most trusting man has| gram. it four $50 and New York street the. other day and advertised for recently gave of 1865 a/ th dime. Virtue has its reward even- tually. (Copyright, 1927, NEA ‘Service, Inc.) | £ [Old Masters * ig was many and many a year|p.-m. the there lived whom with no| WOC (484), Dave at was | entertainers, Winged | ville, will’ broadcast a concert And ‘this was the ‘reaso: that long KFYR, Bismarck Sunday, Jan 23 a. pe Se ger from Presbyterian church. is «| 10; First cadets can smoke open- to 2:00 p. m.—! \- ay: now. pond ge hy oe afta were gram. Bee escuncas tei, Inconvenien when 3 2:00 to 3: Th" no fags between dances. ee Tequest pelt roan. MARE —_— Me January 24 After, coming within 40,000,000] 6:30 to 7:00 p. m—! miles of the eartl "Mars is recedii program. ‘idea coe callabed 00 to 7:15, p. m.—Weather fore- cast, market report, news ‘items. 5 to 8:15 p. m.—Musical pro- P. m., Walter Damrosch ai New York will be honed symphony orchestra throu; ? By Lf inner -, a le A group o' soloists. At 7:: Smith “of Minne: is. mit cai his “fireside hitosog ree nd at 8:30 in choir will give a pro- im of, Scandi: Sgr iries cane navian fie songs. program and another ists from WCCO, —_— group of solo- sent a musicale at sfaals cone judio concert at 7:30 m., KYW (636) Chicago will send ont -@ classical brogramr and WLW (422) Cincinnati, will present a group of — At 8:45 p. m, WHAS (400), Louis- . At 9 p.m, KMA on: Sidosh, will T esian a oi). eee usical pro- ‘gram. Guest talent will at 10 p. m. KT! anna jom by the sea, i ry ine blew’ out of a cloud by Popular Rowe wt Mp oom. co ‘et + ah, will feature old Cuiling my fone tly * | time music, At 11:15 p. ms WSUL came And bore hey sway from. me, To shut if ina sepulcher (484) Towa Cal b week-end with her friend Miss Helen *® ‘A large number from here attend-’ there will be a dance ' Springs ‘dete atone hot WKEC.. will’ give an At 11:45 will breadeast, Bae Cae aS

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