The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 5, 1927, Page 4

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ce SSIES EN oe ner RE I ss 'not read “Ben Hur,” for instance, without getting The Bismarck Tribune 743312505 ene aan Gating ‘ An Independent Newspaper {must have been in those crude days. | ~~" THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ! Even today, with modern sanitary arrangements } (Established 1578) ‘and medical care, the lot of the leper is most un | 1 Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ' fortunate. He is usually segregated from his fel- SBismmarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at low men, with other lepers, and has up to the pres- irck as second class mail matter, ent time faced a very uncertain future, as few cures | 3George D. Mann..........President and Publisher have been recorded up to the time that patie Subscription Rates Payable in Advance oil was discovered. Through the use of derivatives of this oil hundreds | of complete cures have recently been effected, both | i ie Bs in the occident and in the far east. Hope is held Daily by tall outside of Nowth ‘Dakota! 2/211 6:00 out that perhaps all the 2,000,000 lepers in the world | i Member Audit Bureau of Circulation may eventually be cured by their use. The Rocke- : feller Institute is new experimenting with a new the abember of The Associated Press sitled to drug which is said to have effected double cures tho use for republication of all news dispatches of sleeping sickness and leprosy in many cases, credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- lence has worked many weary years on the! yz, and also the local news of spontaneous origin problem of leprosy. Unsung heroes—missionaries, Published herein, All rights of republication of all nurses, doctors ahd other volunteers, have isolated | enon eet Herein ate also reserved. themselves from the world, many times falling vic- £Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, Foreign Representatives ; tim to the dread disease themselves, in an effort to| AN PAYNE COMPANY find a method to relieve the suffering and the men- | G. LOG. CRICAGO (DETROIT tal anguish of those afflicted with it fower Bldg. . resge Bldg.. “jf it is ever possible to wipe out leprosy, when the WW YORE The’ BURNS © SMITH ve. Bldg, (story is told of the work of science, let not praise | of those humble workers, many of whom perished | {Official City, State and County Newspaper) in their task, be omitted from the account. Radio Broadcasting ested When the speech of President Calvin Coolidge is 1 . oF BPW deivs air on Washington's birthday through | Editorial Comment 35 radio broadcasting stations, to the ears of mil- lions of listeners throughout the United States and Stopping a “ the world, it will mark the use of the largest num- (New York Ti ber of stations in one chain ever recorded and it There is an air of tragi-comedy in the accounts cf will illustrate the real value of radio broadcasting Governor Smith’s efforts to prevent anything like as applied to the public welfare. an organized movement in his behalf for the pre: Radio broadcasting has passed from the curiosity dency. What other candidates are at great pains of scientists to the hobby of growing boys and to to create he would incontinently destroy. The start- the service of mankind, Entertainm is a big ing of a presidential boom is easy in its initial feature of the service, but it is not the really s. All you have to do is to induce volunteers feature, The real service rendered by radio broad- to serve on a committee, to get your man prom- easting is in the dissemination of useful inf “mentioned” in news dispatches and other- tion in the form of talks, lectures, good mu 4c. wise, and to iay in a good supply of official cam- Sse y mer minence ane her features nalgn stationery, Just now, for example, many let- staj rma en t themsely one ment e- ters are reaching the east bearing the legend, “Low featu n verage v President.” Whea it t When presidents talk 1 1 ‘ Gexernor Smith will have nor f. Not only will to round up delegates t: ional convention, but he will wa g it one true impor send agen io various p: of the country to itec words of kindness in his interest. He ‘ould discourage even the unattached gentlemen are so eager to enroll themselves among th< tal Smith men,” as well as those politicians inking no less cf themselves than of the = are anxious to hitch their little wagons Conquering Leprosy ng star. Governor Smith, in other words, From the ca:licst times recorded the disease of | is showing as much anxiety to kill cff his boom be- leprosy has been one of particular avoidance by | fore it gets started as the traditional candidate for | gthe human race wherever possible. The cry, “Un- | the presidency is to do everything to make his boom _ clean, unclean!” reverberated throughout the Holy | ficurish like a green bay tree. This’is strietly in that will pro y and understanding. moting u civilizations, warning everyone to beware of those|down for himself. He is going to stick to his jcb “who had contracted the repulsive illness. One can-| at Albany. oY = Coolidge requests machinery for! @ehumidizing the stagnant air in the Senate chamber, © Cafi he mean muzzles for the boys? E z DP) {= Z rj y Anne Aust ill whispering,| “If you don't quit making all that Hattie’s sharp ears| rumpus over nothing, I'll tan your up any of the con-| hid Jim Lane looked up from his} f paper to seowl at his ungest so sure he has the right! daughter over the top of his glasse party under arrest that he’s bother- Faith smiled behind the book she ing very little about the usual rou-|was trying to read. She was glad . my = Or, maybe, it’s tho Democrats he’s ater. © Senators have complained that they have felt “depressed and tired” after @ day in the Senate. Read the Con- 8 ead tine, ems,” Bob answered. “I|that her father was asserting himself! ressional Record and you'll see the: belie nning has left the files in!at. last. For years Martha Reason. as jthe custody of Neff, Uncle Ralph’s|word had been law in the partner, until he gets around to ex-|Street house. Now Jim was jamining them. It’s early, so that!his authority for the first time i my arrival in the building will not s. “It'll be good for hi ‘ : i rticularly — ¢¢ C1 r i i awls | Now they're saying Gladstone was’ get ‘off at the fifth floor, where al | Ce alt ee th eee be paves | @ Don Juan. We expect to hear next architect I know has an offi The; It was just after nine when three pat Napoleon Bonaparte was 4 Gi-| elevator man will think I'm ing| short honks of an automobile horn golo. Bog on my friend, as I frequently .) sent Faith flying out of the house. * The Moros are fighting Uncle Sam's | fincy whare tree Raley erent | | L wanted tose tax collectors, Now that the income! and take tax valentines are coming around, you before ean expect to hear from several Mo: | os in this country. \eCopyright, 1927, NEA Service, Ine.) | ba * Headlines you never see: Heflin gilent as foes abuse him. As I toldj her se: beside him. a hink I passkey to Uncle) found it—the letter, I mean. Of e _L used to] name. with him at night, and| onl he'd send me over to the| B, I had the devil of a time | ing! office to get a paper he needed. If] it, If it had happened to be a T1QUR Bi they haven't changed locks I can get|or an S—good Lord! But fortuns jin all right. I hope Neff's gone home| ly B is the second letter of the alpha-| New York, Feb. 5.—The siren song to dinner and that‘none of the bet. At tl I had to wade through | ef opportunity, which brings youth |is working late tonight. But I'm off| all the Cs first, then start over again | Bcurrying from farms and desks to;now, dear. Don’t worr. If they} with the As. And it takes a whole! this one and only Gotham, keeps catch me it—-which they won’t—| drawer to hold the first four letters echoitig in their cars long after) they can’t really do anything to m of the alphabet. I never realized | ‘ distillusion has set in. “Finish your supper first, "| Uncle Ralph had such an extensive | They drift here and there, follow-|Faith urged him. “Aunt Hattie will| correspondence file.” inng’dne lead and-then another and! be hurt if you don’t eat three pie; “Good heavens Faith laughed. taking work they would sneer atiof chicken, at least. And you do|“Are you going to talk all night? back home—just to be closer to the! need food,” she added, her anxious| Let me see it, Bob. { song's source. jeyes on his worry-ravaged young] “I took the original aight to One comes across them in the face. i ._| Churchill. Bad business to monkey | most unexpected places and with| “It was a few minutes after six| around with evidence, or what may a certain sense of shock and sur-!when Bob Hathaway left the house,| be evidence, if we're lucky. But I prise. jon burglarizing “mission. During| typed a copy of it myself. Here—| o 4, ® the two hours that Faith waited for| you can read it under the dashboard | The other day I hailed the first| word fromshim she was grateful for| light. T can’t make much of it, but) taxi that came by and, as it sped; Aunt Hattie’s unceasing flow of con-| it's evidently the letter Cherry re. through Central Park, from the driv-| versation, even for that indomitable] membered. Too bad she didn’t have | er’s seat I heard a lusty young voice|spinster’s furious arguments .With| enough curiosity about it to talk it! singing a cross-section of the Puc-|Joy over the haircut she was giving] over with Uncle Ralph.” | the child. He unfolded a sheet of plain white} “You're cutting it too short!” Joy| paper and without further comment | wailed, her grief for her mother sub-| handed it to Faith to read. | My’ driver, it seems, had been'morced in this new tragedy. “I'll} TOMORROW: hey read the let- None other than one Kenneth Le look like a funny paper kid. I did ter that may hold all clues. | » who was studying for grand | opera and driving a taxi by way of! >, hee as shes g a living in the meanwhile, {Sully Blank was a minister's daugh-| Why didn’t you ever tell as you were| this is to let the boys back|ter from a certain tank town andj a minister's daughter and once sang! in the Utah Agricultural College, sang. in the ‘choir. in the choir?” demanded the PA. | Know that, even though Kenneth| He duly recorded it and when| “And have you weisenheimers give| ited from there, they’re it reached the copy-readet’s »ndj me the laugh? You'd have told me to keep him down| city. editor’s desk 4 loud laugn| to invent a new one.” It’s too late now.| went up. GILBERT SWAN. jeen Broadway and scanned the) «Felj for the oldest gag on the tropolitan from the gallery and! street,” the young reporter Was going to make the grade OF samonished. Angered, and cur T paid my fare I inquired onthe map. and sent a tolcgeam| | Justajingle 3 Mr the Utah college ait, the Rev. Bina, {Congres | | alist _ minister, e ; " we ? J coprarnoe an NewYork. Promptly came the rnawer: “It| She d : old Utah!” sighed my} Promptly came, {he rnewor: | Slt) 'ghe told HIM where to a i In’t tell him where, but shucks, “Bat gimme New York! “GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES’ IS MUCH ENJOYED BY CAPACITY AUDIENCE HERE cs Old ana il When the hounds of spring are on winter's traces, mother of mon ‘upreme court at Lansing, Mich., » last act Lorelei has re’ York, and in her ving her comii Marion as Lore: ths in meadow or also that of Will Spoffard, Herbert | ., Ils the shadows ‘and’ windy, places nan, Fred Backus as| W!th lisp of leaves and ripple of iy Beek. And the brown bright Leona Maricle as Gloria At. A strong supporting s Harry, the ste Is half assuaged for. Itylus, |For the Thracian ships and the for- The tongueless vigil, and all the pain. rd La Roche as Robert ‘Brous- | on as Louis Brous- | Com e with bows bent and with empty- ing of quivers, Maiden most perfect, lady of light, With a noise of winds and many | prese | equa: being» @————______________g =Land and Egypt and Rome and Greece in the earlier | line_with the course which the governor has laid | #iven in f NEWS BRIEFS ———___——§ Dr. T. S. Vaca. Sacasa |tive at Washington, With a clamor of waters, and with inig! Bind_on thy sandals, oh thou most ed a successful ru | duration in C) Hil Nicaragua Over as; conserva- et; at Boca de Plata.| For the faint east quickens, the wan west shivers, Round the feet of the day and the feet of the night. cet, the splendor and speed of thy The comedy de 3 SAINT @3 SINNER relei Lee, and Henry Ford in Detroit says capital fundamentally wrong as a cure for crime as charity is as a cure for poverty. 4 | punishment Chorus from “Atalanta in Calydon.” Paul—Stockholders Ne orthern Pacifie re- eive formal notice of contemplated jeonsolidation of those roads. Hibbing—Relay ————————————__———— | Temperature and Road Conditions (Mercury readings at 7.a. m.) Bismarck—Cloudy, 19; roads good. St. Cloud—Raining, 35; r Minot—Cloudy, Fargo—Drizzling, 1 Mandan—Cloudy, 2 Crookston—Cloudy, 15; Devils Lake—Cloudy Forks—Cloudy, Hibbing—Cloudy, 1 Winona—Cloudy, 33; roads fair. Jamestown—Clear, 10; roads fair. 28; roads good. ng, 37; roads soft. team of University of Minnesota equal world’s relay rec- ord of 1:14 4/5 in 160-yard swim lating to the highes Miss Loos and Mr. En taken the best parts of Lorelei for weaving a play nerson have! istrict Attorney Asa Keyes in Los les refuses to act on complaint a Grey Chaplin asking her hus- arrest for alleged non-sup- name as the play| 11; roads fair. caused no end of lang! Lorelei travels in luxu' President and Mrs. Coolidge decide jand it is in a ver | costl out here, | first act is laid for lp! ffices are,| away from the family,” Bob told her | operating. them] as she climbed into the car and took| 's feur Meee Duluth—Cloud; Rochester—Mis! Mankato—Cloud; | Washington while White House is be- Three Shelton i) P : walked seven miles in his He had it made for|course Cherry didn’t remember the | everybody keeps the fun up to a con- ntly in the streets of Lon- It is signed with an initial! tinuous round of real joy. id that initial is not C, but! - robbery,! sleep r¢ of mail messenger; convieted at don, OARDING HOUSE vet: . GONG Y=. BUT-THAT FELLA PBA MOVIES HELLIS MINUTE, 19 DINGIN IT OFF KEV, AN! WIS VOICE 1S SHAKY! F vw HE GHOULD PUT MORE/* OBBLIGATO W IT Like THig, — 3 A Musy LEave You MULL-LEE $ LEAVE You MOLLY DARLING — THOUGH Fy - 4’ KHICHEN, THEN MRS. HooPLe i, OPERA STAR 7 Lions’ Club, Grand Pacific Hotel. P. E. O., Mrs. E. B. Cox .. City Commission, City Hall a P.M. Masonic Blue Lodge, Masonic Temple ....... P.M. 8 Kiwanis Club, Grand Pacific Hotel .. see 12:15 P. My Methodist Missionary Society, Mrs. D. H. Hauser . 30 P, M. Mothers’ Club, Mrs. R. M. Bergeson ......... . P.M. Business & Professional Women, Business Clu I. O. O. F. Subordinate, I. 0. 0. F. Hall ic Chapter, Temple . Progressive Mothers Club, Mr: 9 Rotary, Grand Pacific Hotel .. Sunshine Society, Mrs. Wagner Current Events Club, Mrs. Zuger... Fortnightly Club, Mrs. Worth Lumry .. Wednesday Study Club, Miss Marion Bur! De Molay, Masonic Temple ... American Legion, A. 0. U. W.. . American Legion Auxiliary, Lions Club Room ..... 10 Presbyterian Missionary Society, Presbyterian Church Company A, City National Bank Building ... Thursday Musical Club, Grand Pacific Hotel “Seven Keys to Baldpate” Auditorium ...... Ladies Auxiliary to Patriarch Militant, I. 0. 0. F. 11° Delphian Society $2 Basketball, Bismarck vs. Mandan, High School .. Rebekahs, I. O. O. Hall . Bismarck Lodge of B. of R. T., A. 0. U. W. Knights of Columbus, St. Mary’s Hall 12. U. C. T,, Elks’ Hall .......... U. C. T. Auxiliary, Elks’ Hall.. Mi Presa ERERS KEKE Pores Sunda; 230 Ella Brelj: 10:30 a, m, (German). 6:30 p.m. Bible hor 7:30 p. m. vices. ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL Rev. F. H. Davenport, Rector. 614 Mandan Ave. Fifth Sunday after Epiphany. 8:30 a. m. Holy Communion. Church school. 11 a, m. Choral Eucharist and ser- 10 a. m. m tice, 8:15 p. service. tice. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRI8T, SCIENTIST Cor. Fourth St. & Ave. C. Sunday services at 11:00 a. m. Subject Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday (Missouri Synod) Fourth street and Avenue A J. V. Richert, Pastor. Miss! Mrs. Morris will pla Classes for all. r, Evening service (Eng- on, Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Choir prac-. tianity.” Crusade prayer, Selection by the see Saturday 1 p. m. Junior Choir Prac- testimonial} 10 Black Joe” |., "When the Roll Is Called Up Yonder.” Sermon: “The Passinng of Jordan.” Paul S. Wright |_Prelude:.“Way Down Upon The Morning Worship’ Swanee River”............ arranged |, Offertory: “My Old’ Kentucky | Home” . arranged. . Petroli. larch” ‘ 8:45 p. m. Immediately following Postlude ish.) All cordially welcome to our ser-'the evening service there will be a \ reception and sing-song for the young jpeople of the community who are not attending other churches. TRINITY ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH Ave. C and Seventh St. I, G. Monson, Pastor Services on Ween at 10:45. Topic: “The Wonders of Chris- | Sunday School at 12 m. All classes. Evening services at 7:30. Topic: , Rev. 10, introducing Anti-Christian- \ ity, the last great enemy as the name implies. All welcome. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Corner of Fourth St. and Ave. B. A. Stephens, Pastor. morning worship, subject, meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room , “ihe Meaning of the Lord’s Supper.” is open in the church building every! 12:00. Sunday School. Classes for Tuesday, Thursday and Satu: cept legal holidays, f1 All are welco1 - all ages. R. E. Kennedy, superin- . m,, tendent. to attend: these! 6:80. Senior B. Y. P. U. services and to visit the reading, Junior B. Y. P. U. oom. FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCR Corner Seventh Street and A\ Rev. A. J. Malmquist, ‘pastor. Adult Bible’ class. ‘ j 38 evening _wors! subject, {~The Second Coming of Christ ite p. ‘the Redeemed,” } 7330 Wednesday evening, prayer Sunday School 9:30 a. m: Mr. Clar- ™ecting. Psalm 4. ence Larson, superintendent. Vai Divine services (Swedish) 10:30'a, di m, Text on the Fifth Sunday. after Epiphany, Mark 4:26-29. “The Development of God's dom.” Thursday afternoon, the La- Aid will meet at the church. They will at that time have their quarterly birthday social. The ordinance of the Lord’s Supper will be: administered at the close of Vesper service 7:30 p. m. Sermon the service Sunday morning. on the Epistle of the Day, Eph. 4:14- “An Apostolic Against Erroneous Doctrines.’ Th choir will sing suitable anthems at both services. The catechumens mect: Wednesday N. E. Beptrow, 16. Subject: at 4 o'clock p, m. The church ‘cho’ director, meets Friday evening at o'clock. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Thayer and 2nd Street Paul 8. W: tt. ior Church School. Morning worship. cast by Radio Station kins-Meyer). Organ Prelud: 9:30 a.m. Juni 10:80, Anthem Sermon: 12 Noon: Senior-Intermediate, Primary Departments of the Church Classes for visitors. 4 p.m. Junior Christian Endeavor, Intermediate" Christian School. 7:30 p.m. Endeavor. 7:30 p.m. slaves, The Chorus Choir will sin, Negro Spirituals: “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” “Nobody Knows ‘The Trouble I've ren’ “Steal Away To Jesus” “Deep River” Solo: Mrs. J. Baven- dick. The Congregation, led by the choir and’ song leader, will sing: “I Love Him” to the tune of “Old : ee es dgnominational "Feliowship through Mrs. R. E. Morris “I Waited Fer the Lord” “Presbyterian Church Offertory: “Pastorale”... Solo: “The Cross” .... Henry Halvorson Divine Power” ev. Paul S. Wright “March From ‘Wagner Adult, Young People’s, Beginners and Evening Service: A service has been planned in keeping with the spirit of Lincoln's birthday, especially remembering his great act of proclaiming emancipation for the j ieee i IMMANUEL EVANGELICAL CHURCH Corner Seventh and Rosser ‘Sts. : C. F. Strutz, Pastor. Northeait of Bismarck Hospital. | rosea services as follows: Special Day of Prayer services and 3 Sermon at 10:00 a. m. fl special music by members of the ; Woman's Missionary Society. ‘mon: “Prayer and the White Harvest Field.” | | Sunday school at 11:00 a. m., Hon. Ben. C. Larkin, Superintendent in charge. re classes for all. Come! Evangelical League of Christian En- deavor at 7:15 p.m. Topic: “Inter- istian Endeavor,” ‘Miss Esther Teichman, leader, Evening sermon: “The Great Re- | fusal and Its Consequences.” 8:00 re, Be Me. 1, Midweek service on Wednesday at larrict Ware, 7°45 p.m. McCABE METHODIST THODIST EPISCOPAL Walter F. Vater, Pastor Divine service will be conducted ; Sunday as follows: 10:30 morning worship. Rev. Daniel Earl will preach. Ser- nion subject, “The World Under the Leadership of the Divine Spirit.” The choir will sing the anthem entitled, “O Paradise, O Paradise,” by Am- brose. Professor Winther wilt sing a selected solo, Organ music. Pre- lude, “Devotion,” by Deppen. Offer- tory. Elegie, by Massenet. Postlude, march, by Petri 2 noon Sunday hool. Classes for all ages. Adult lasses especially invite you, 3:30 ee Junior League. Epworth engue. 7:30 p. m, evening worship, | At this service Rev. Daniel Earl will preach on the subject: “Soul Bank- Tuptey.” The young people's choir will sing the anthem entitled, “Be Still and Know That I Am the Lord,” by: McPhail. The men will favor us with special music. Organ music, Festival march, by Kroger. Offer- tory. Evening hour by Hulten. Post- jude march,. Tielman, i} (Copyright, 1927. NEA Service, Inc.) | the seribe looked’ up the town TS Seataiinae he ¥ chorines were coached to} trary.’ pe s ri-' After flashing the message in tA’ THoucaT Maraball towns thet the wise. the faces of his. superiors, the re- _ ATHOUGHT ° pow have a line which ty pereer presented it ‘o the pub-/@0 ks were once either; licity man. Charity shall cover the multitade f this story, a of sina—1 Peter! 4:8, li ry 4 The last it, was in the publ Bei “blk had] |The bghontxeeian of sharity te "that wesgay, why did you Bold out @ vst! Bocktainster: ; | AT THE MOVIES , -———_____——_+ CAPITOL THEATRE One of the unique screen presen- ar is Fred Thom- O. production, “A tations of the sons’ latest F. Regular Scout,” which ii the last times today at the Capitol icture features a Boy in the West. This is the first time that the aims and ac- ti of the Scout Organization have ever been ‘filmed, is one of national interest, and be- cause of its wide appeal, the intimate and inside workings of tion are entertainin tively revealed. -The romance as well as numberless thrills in which the dashi ures promi: Reroines Me eroine, Bick nee im, Harry Courtright. Theatre, fs story laic ities at him thaw misadventures in Potters,” arriving at “Tho boasts a/ exchanges it for a couple of Silver King fig- e cast include: » in the role of t kland directed, | scenes fo! and is also the author of the con-| Ivy Ha: tinuity which was mad original story by. B. F. Oxford are laughing led ‘ot ls | euceks See Eltinge for Monday and Tuesday, with W. C. Fields starred as Pa, con- cerns itself with the episode in which Pa becomes interested in an oil deal. If ‘you've never read J. P. McEvoy’s comic strip or seen ‘his play, it might be wise to say that “The Potters” are a family of average, human, everyday Americans. Pa is honest, blundering and ambitious, loves her husband but continually argues with him. Mamie is eighteen and a flapper, Bill has reached an age where he can sport a cute little mus- tache, ‘ The film opens as Pa decides to Plunge into a sure-fire oil deal. He tukes all the mortgage ‘money and iit edge bonds. Mamie gets wind of it but to curb her tor i dig her one comes suspicious, kets is mall profit and—ol yy starts flowing. Whet horney ! Nothing but laugh allow ‘on, tack rris and Mal vy m the} tured-in Mr, Fields’ amoun --

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