The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 5, 1927, Page 10

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} rs i The Bismarck Tribune o An Indcpendent Newspaper es THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) r A k Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, » Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisber Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ..........++-6+ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) WDaily-by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck). Daily by mail, outside of North Dako’ “Member Audit Bureau of Circulati Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to 7.20 1.20 wee 6.00 Credited to it or not otherwise credited in pa- rz, and also the local news of spontaneous origin Published herein. All rights of republication of ail other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives ; PAYNE COMPANY cnrcacy: 1°C4N “DETROIT Towe? Bldg. oo Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMIT NEWYORK - -. - - Fifth Ave, Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Time to Start Planning It is not a cheerful picture which Prof. H. H. the observation of his fellow citizens, By the year 2000, says Prof. Barrow, the United States will be inhabited by 325,000,000 people. Cities will be congested; the countryside will be jammed, It will be hard to feed this huge popula- ticn; hard to find fuel enough for them all. As if this were not enough, he adds that we have ady started going through our natural resources ing economic perversion in the history of the world.” This is a highly Pessimistie forecast the profes- |v soy gives us. It is not the sort of thing to which we are used. It is custdmary for people who look into the future to proclaim that America has ever- increasing prosperity and happiness before it. Prof. Barrow does not think so. Undoubtedly there will be plenty of qualified diagngsticians to gree with his prophecy. lucky and blind. But it seem if Prof, Barrow may be rig! a this extent; the days when America could afford to | drift merrily along, letting the future take care of itself, are about ended. What we need now is plenty of careful, far-} sighted planning for the future. for our mines, for our oil wells, for our farm lands ~—is something that we must undertake soon on 4 national scale. Some sort of plan must be estab- lished, without thought of politics. Every city must look ahead, too. are duc to have a dozen citi York is now. It should be‘ po: ing cities to plan their fut layouts so that they can avoid the unbearable crowding and congestion that New York suffers. There is little doubt that America will be able to carry a population of 325,000,000. Our natural e: resources are still tremendous; we have the brain- power to cope with the problem. Apparently we But we might as well admit that this tremendous population increase won't be an unmixed blessing. We might as well begin planning for it right now. e Goodwill Flyers The grief which we feel concerning the untimely death of two of the Goodwill army fliers, Capt. Buenos Air is to some extent assuaged by the realization that their tragic end occurred in a friendly country, rgentina, the South American country mest similar to the United States. Certainly had they died in the United States they could have had no greater tributes paid to their skill and to their memory than was paid to them in Ar- gentina, Offic: nd ¢ cther to express their sympathy and their admira- tion for the airmen, who had traversed half of a difficult journey, designed to cement the Americas in a tighter bond of friendship. death, these two heroic fliers will have succeedes to a greater extent in their mission than they did ~in life. Military honors of the highest nature were paid to the dead aviators. Their bodies lay in state at the Military club under an honor guard as thou- sands of Argentinans and Americans living in Ar- gentina paid their respects to our aerial emis- saries. Great throngs attended services held for a vessel which was to bring them to the land of their birth. journey that two would not return alive. We can but be thankful that Major Herbert A. Dargue, commander of the flight, and Lieutenant Whitehead were able to save themselves by means of para- es. They will continue the flight along the original plans. It will be a sad homecoming, how- ever, fur them and for the United States, Free Speech—and Cowardice A group of masked men the other day waylaid young, Ralph Batschelet, Denver university student, took him outside the city and gave him a severe flogging. They did it, they explained, for this reason: Batschelet was a leader in the “Thinkers’ Asso- ciation,” which had arranged a debate on marriage between the Rev. B. A. Jenkins of Kansas City and Judge Ben Lindsey. * ‘They warned him that his punishment was “only 4 sample” of what would happen to him if the de- bate were ‘held. ei t _- The whole incident ah nodes .is of minor impor- tance to the country at large. Yet it is typical of the mental attitude of a large number of citizens. Judge Lindsey’s views on marriage could be ut- ¥ erly tnistaken and wildly dangerous; the floggers ‘ 7 ling America and acting as true, patriotic citizens. | But if so, they do not yet fully understand what iS | meant by the guarantee of free speech. It means not only that we can state our arguments unmo- jlested, but that our opponents can do the same, It is too horrible to think that some of our great “cap-/ tains of industry” may in reality be mere wasters, Clinton F. Woolsey and Lieut. John E, Benton, at| ens alike vied with each | Perhaps now, in| ‘they were Protect- | and for the future | What! | depart. revolvers, | Men now living can remember when a revolver . 5.00| was as much a part of a Montanan’s street equip- | A man was apt to| } be embarrassed if he appeared in public without | ment as a pair of suspenders. | either. | But those days are gone. | ceased to be on the frontier. jas Boston. | dash and color to the old days. | worth a hundred of the Dur | east spawns, | the gun-toting frontier vanish. {much about now? | ficial? Well, in Peking the other day Chi their first taste of chop suey. T! | good. | Furthermore, news dispatches say that after eat- ike a horde of grasshoppers.” He remarks that | ing the'chop suey, the young Chinese went to the scientists of the future will deem our age “the most | dance floor and proceeded to do the Charleston as | avidly as any American collegians. | hai and short skirts. ing” is complete, man than his father was at the | Dean Mendell of, Yale. | mosphere than in the good old days. | generation. bears did—can we blame him? No Revolvers? | One by one the glories of this world fade and} | The sovereign, state of Montana is now HEetaless to enact a law prohibiting the wearing of |' Somehow, we hate to think of it. There was a| Compare the west- rn outlaw with this modern, big city counterpart. | Slade, gunman and killer, who ended his days danc- | | ing on the air before a Vigilance committee—he was | and Chapmans the | It may be wrong to say it; but we hate to sec Yes, China Is Awakening Just how real and thcroughgoing an affair is Barrow of the University of Chicago presents for | this “national awakening” in China that we hear so Is it genuine or is it only super- | And, to make it complete, their dancing partners re pretty Chinese girls, with unbound feet, bobbed Frem all indications, China’s “national awaken- A Word For Our Youth The modern college student is actually a better same age, Talk of modern youth’s | wildness and wickedness to the contrary notwith- Hit 401 standing, college halls have a more wholesome at- Remember, when youth comes in for its panning, that the messes which-the world has gone through | in the last decade or two were the work of the older If modern youth chooses to adopt dif- Conservation work of-all kinds—for our forests, | {rent guiding stars for his conduet than his fore- Blocdless Big Game Hunting The stories of the big game hunter sound thrill- They make. us all wish to shoulder a gun and as large as New] tramp over mountains or through jungles to shoot le for our grow-| wild animals and collect imposing trophies for our ing. homes, Dan McCowan, photographer at Banff, Alberta, He has spent 20 years hunting big game in the Canadian Rockies—but he hunts has a better idea. with a camera, not a gun. He gets all the thrills the regular hunter gets—, He has a whole album full! Best of all, the number of wild creatures has not | and trophies? been diminished by his hunting. | responsibility to the public. | jas is humanly possible.” | Speaking at a dinner of the Rochester Press Club | | last week, Edward McKernon, superintendent of | ; the Eastern Division of the Associated Press, said: | “If you do not remember anything else that I | say tonight, I beg of you to remember this: | Associated Press never comments on the news. them just prior to the placing of the caskets aboard | "4 Say that the president made an address, but | | Editorial Comment The ‘Newspaper’s First Responsibility | (Rochester Democrat and Chroniele) | Two recent expressions, by men in- positions to | {express their ideas in acts as well as in words, | have been given to the most vital quality of the | | modern newspaper which recognizes and accepts its | Speaking at the annual Iuncheon of the Asso-| ciated Press in-New York city the other day, Frank | |B. Noyes of Washington, president of the associa- | tion, .referring to the quality that should charac- | terize the news distributed by the association, said: | “The news service must be nonpartisan in its | q | broadest and in its strictest sense; it must be with- out bias of any sort, and it must be as accurate | se youths got ‘Chinese” dish, which was invented in America, was introduced to \ the celestial city, and the Chinese youths found it | | | i | | Only in places like |, the ure for republication of all news dispatchés | Chicago is the pistol still essential. ' Montana has Butte is as urbane | | says The | practically above suspicion. | >? Now the Question Is: For: ME SAINF,=1 SINNER \ Bob's excitement when Faith told him what ‘she had learned about Phil, the beggar, was a precious balm to the hurt which Churchill’s rude- ness and incredulity had dealt her overcharged heart. “We've got something to work on, at last,” Bob exulted. “So the old boy’s name ig Schultz — Philip Schultz. I'll get his address tomor- row from his peddlar’s license. And we'll play our hand alone, darling. I have a hunch that we can unravel this mystery without Churchill.” “T hate Churchill!” Faith cried. “I don't believe he cares two cents for Cherry or anyone else. All he’s in- terested in is his fee.” “Oh, he wants to get an acquittal, of course,” Bob reassured her. “It would be a big feather in his cap. Banning is strutting these days— open and shut case, he says. Our. chance is that he is so sure of his case that he won't exert himself. He'll want to string the ‘trial out as long as possible and make it as s sational as possible, since the press will be flashing his name from one end of the country to the other.” “Do you know whether Churchill's investigator—Crowell, didn’t y y his name is?—has found a clue to the writer of the threatening letter sent Mr. Cluny from prison?” Faith asked, ‘Churchill says he’ found three men who just about fill the bill. But there is none whose initial is B, and so far they haven’t been able to pin a motive on any of them. Churchill said one of them had been bedridden with tuberculosis; another got out of Atlanta six months ago, and has moved to New York. His alibi is apparently beyond question. The third is a business man here' town, P ¢ Chureh: ill thinks the letter was sent by crank, that it has no significance whatever.” * The next morning: Faith was un- able to leave the house, for Joy's tem- Perature had suddenly risen at an alarming rate, and pneumonia threat- ened. ob telephoned while Faith was rubbing the little chest of the sick child with aromatic oils. “Don’t leave me, Faith. I feel aw- |ful. I can't breathe hardly,” Joy moaned, “Just to answer the _ telephone, precious,” Faith reassured her tend- erly. . “I’ve checked up on the license Z| We | we may not say that it was a good address. That knowledge of the facts.” | is for the reader to determine for himself. We lay For this touching tribute to our dead we are 1°wn facts without any suggestion as to the con- | deeply thankful and truly appreciative. Little did | “lusions to be drawn from these facts. This must we think when our men set out on the hazardous, "Wt in a public opinion founded on a universal Both speakers were referring to the quality in| the news report of the Associated Press upon which they lay most stress; but what they said is imbed- ded deep in the soul of every newspaper man in | the United States who is fortunate enough to be | employed by or to be conducting a newspaper which | | fully recognizes its responsibility. The day when a newspaper could permit its ‘news | | report to be modified in the interest of some po-| ot lo¢al, is long past. fairly represent the facts? the future is, and will be, for ‘public cpinion\by presenting it may be intelligently formed: ~ never newspapers do their full duty of society accurately, |. core “What this will The newspapers of a by-gone day, some of them | reflecting great personalities, took great pride in their power to mold Public opinion according to | their desires. The newspaper.of the Present and Proud to show its respect the facts on which This, as Mr. McKernon” pointed out, the world before has known; but this the world in the future increasingly will know, if the responsible by. reporting the facts fairly and in their true pre- mean for the future of Ameri¢a of the world cannot be meesured. litical party or group, or to be inflated and thrown | |out of proportion to serve the propaganda interest | of some organization or influence, whether national | | Every bit of news that is | | published. in a responsible newspaper today must be | tested by the criterion: Does it accurately and NUT PATENTS, C= CORNER, ~ YL A AFFAIRS OR FARN RELIEF OR NAVY APPROPRIATIONS OR SICH TANGS UST SEND UR BOARDING HOUSE ZZ \WMit EVER BECOME ‘OF THAT (DEAR OF NouRe MASOR, ABOUT MAKIN’ FooD Wo PILLS Zw “e LIKE ALL YOUR OTHER ' You se9’ GIVE 'EM A WALTZ, AN’ THEN LEAVE 'EM IN A UE: . Wf ZZ HHO PML Ls BANNER clerk, honey,” Bob told her. “And, say, there's something else to set your Sherlock wits-working. Old Phil renewed his peddlar’s license in June, and the handwritting is quite different from that on his license of the year before!” entertain the tremendous was knocking for admittance. of an educated man?” “Sorry to disappoint you, hone: Bob answered with a slight chuckie, as if he had guessed the cause of her excitement. “But it’s a queer, child- ish scrawl, such as I might do with my left hand. Maybe old Phil's right hand became so crippled with rheu- matism that he had to learn to write with his left. But anyway, I've found out his address, or at least, the ad- dress he gave in June, and I’m going down to Peach Tree Hollow this af- ternoon. I'l be around for supper, if you'll let me bring the makings.” ‘TOMORROW: A_ disappointment for the .amateur detectives on the very eve of the trial. BARBS - COLLEGE LIFE Seventeen universities have ban- ned students’ automobiles as detri- mental to morals, After the stu- dents had been driving half the night, it seems they couldn't be driven to work, . . When som of the boys ended their university careers the automobile was the onls engineering they. kne .. A fel- low who had tried all evening to find a girl who'd ride in a flivver wouldn't be interested in any more exgeri- ments the next day. The ‘stu- ;dent whose car had for punctures and a leak in the gas tank refused to be bothered with economics. -A student, ciught in a theft, was unbalanced, college authorities’ de- cided. But then maybe he was try- ing to balance up. ¢ ° A woman left $25,000 to the United States — government. The millenium got by before we had a chance to notice it. In New Guinea the bride's “kin until the couple hi Who Learned More? | this country sometimes they wait settled down. “Coolidve Lifts Iron. Duty,” says a headline. to the job,. just United for e same. States Nicaragua, The rules doesn’t ing Chinese a bit. has but seem to bother the revolt- But we're going to stick made that (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) —__—_—____—____-6 | Ol4Masters | Eat thou and drin tomorrow .thou! shalt die.» | Surely the earth, that’s wise, being very old, Needs not our help. oe loose me, love, and hol Thy sultry hair up from my face; that I | May pour for thee this golden wine, brim-high, Till round the glass thy fingers \ “ glow like gold. We'll drown all hours; thy song, while hours are tolled, Shall leap, as fountains changing sky. veil the Now kiss, and think that there are really those, My own high-bosomed beauty, who increase Vain gold, vain lore, and yet might ‘choose our way! Through many years they toil; then on a day They die not—for their life was death—but cease; | And round their narrow ‘lips the m mould falls elose. + ~-Dante * Gabriel © Rosetti: from “The House of Life.” J —____—_—___+ an Justajingle | or The baby had no bottle, and It made the youngster sad. Why did it want its bottle? Well, It took right af -——_—_—________@ For riches certaial selves wings.—Provei xxii | ATHOUGHT | make .them- sRiches' oftentimes, if nobody takes them away, make to theniselves wings and fly away; and truly, many a time the undue sparing of them is shoot arrows at the groom on the wedding day, says an explorer. In HoH? ~ ~~ NO PANTRN GHE “fo ME, EGAD! eH? LE, ELIZ, LLL aIPA We VW TEM but letting their wings grow, which makes them ready to fly. Leighton. 5 away.— ; By Ahern LF SMALL CHANGE FT WF WELL KEARNY, MMAN. FOR NouR INFORMATION, LET TWIG: GTARTLE YOU, AHEM 1 WAVE GOLD THE. RIGHTS AND PROCESS “10 MANUFACTURE MY ‘FOOD PILLG To A LARGE EASTERN QNADICATE FOR $10,000 !~— DOUBT A FORTUNE “To Now + BUT HAW —~ SuoT SOUTH SIDE MISSION & CHARITY J. B. Happel, Pastor. Sweet and Sixteenth street. Services every Sunday at 1 a.m. Prayer on request, English and German, Prayer on request. Phone 557-5, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST /Cor. Fourth St. & Ave. C. Sunday services at 11:00:0, m. Subject: “Man.” Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. ‘Wednesd: evening ‘testim meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room is open in the church builditig every Tueaday, Thursday and Satu: ry @R- cept legal holidays, from 2 to 4 p: m. ~ FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner Seventh St. and Ave. D. Rev. A. J. Malmquist, Pastor. — Sunday School 9:45'a. m. ©. C Larson, Superintenden %; Divine Service (Swedish) 10:30 a. m. Sermon on the Gospel on the First -Sunday in Lent. Subject: “The Source of True Joy. On Sunday evenings during Lent the pastor will preach a series of sermons in English on the P: of our Lord. The sermon, Sunday vening, 7:30 o'clock, will be on the Subject: “Christ’s Mental Agony in Forcknowing His Death.” able Passion anthems will be sung by’ the chureh choir. ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL Rev, F: H. Davenport, Rector. 514 Mandan Ave, First Sunday in Lent. 10 a. m. Church School. 11 a, m. Choral Eucharist and ser- mon, ! There will be no early communién service on Sunday. Rev.-G. W. Thom of Mandan will conduct the service and preach on Sunday as the Rector will be in Jamestown conducting Crusade ser- vices. , Lenten service on Friday evening at 8 o'clock. ‘The Vestry. meeting is postponed to Tuesday, March 15th, The Guild will meet on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Cullen, 306 Mandan street. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Thayer and 2nd Street Paul 8, Wright. March 6, 1927. “Gothic Mareh.”—Soschini Mrs. Morris. Anthem: “Forever with the Lord.” —Scroggs. Presbyterian Church Quartet. Offertory: Diggie. Prelude: “Autumn Memories.”— Mrs, Morris. Anthem: “Who is like unto Thee.” Presbyterian Church Quartet. Sermon: “The Armor of Light.” Paul 8. Wright. Postlude: “From Death unto Life.” —Heiser. Mrs. Morris. Evening Service Prelude: “Larghetto”—Hankins. Song ‘Service: Twenty minutes of inspirational singing. A rally ser- vice in anticipation of the special meetings of the week following. Offertory: ‘Repose?’—Watson. - Sermon: “Not in Word, but in Power.” é Paul S. Wright: Postlude: “Festival March.”—Stults. Mrs, Morris. Immediately following the even- ing service, the young people of the Presbyterian church will hold an in- formal “get-acquainted reception” for all the young people of the com- munity who are attending no other church, #1. yi Monson, ee thet Services Sun morning al je Topic: "God's Thougits vs. ‘Man's Thoughts.” Anthem by the choir. Sunday school, all classes at 12 m Evening service 7:30. : Topic: Rev. 11. chapter, to- with the 12th and 18th, cgn- some very difficult acre ty juse. ee tains which enthusiasts grossly “ION EV. LUTHERAN "+ (Missouri | Synod) Fourth street and Avenue A ichert,’ s 2 Sunday services as followss:: First Sunday in Lent. p m, Sunday school im Ella Brelje, Supt Morning “Worship 7 6 m. Bible Hour, 9:30 ts m. Evening service (Eng- ish). The preaching will be relevant to the Passion of Christ. In the evening the pastor will begin a series of ser- mons on the Seven Words from the Cre The first being: “Thé Great Intercession.” : FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Corner of Fourth St. and Ave. B. C. A. Stephens, Pastor. 10:30 Morning worship,‘Dr. Fred E. Stockton, preaching. 12:00. Sdnday School. Cl: R. z Kennedy, Senior B. Y. P. V. Junior B. Y. P. U. : worship, Dr. Stock- 7:30 Evening ton, preaching. n 7:30 Wednesday: evening, prayer — meeting ‘and business meeti: 3:00 Thursday afternoon, the’ ‘Aid meets at. Mrs. O’Hare’s, 802'*-Fifth: Mrs, O'Hare and Mts. Fulkeristein, hostesses, q Dr: Fred E, Stockton, of Fargo) our state secretary, supply the pul- pit at’ both services Sunday in >the absence of the pastor, who is holding a special meeting. - a5 There will be:some very important matters to come before the members of the chugch at the meeting next Wedne - CHURCH Walter E. Vater, Pastor. Divine service: will’ be sond Sunday as follows: ‘ 10:30 morning worship. he yes. tor will preach on the subject: ie Man Who Got Bis Price.” The choir will sing the anthem entitled; “Angel i ver Singing,” by Shelley, and Di |. A. Anderson will sing a duet entitled, “My Faith Looks Up to Thee,” by "Nevin. Organ music. Prelude. zo, Sgalet. ‘Offertory. Jensen. Postlude, Crus: Intermez- Serénade, ers, Valk Evening worship. At he pastor will preach the third of a series of sermons on “The Ten Commandments in’ Modern Life.”" “Thou Shalt’ Not Take the Name of the Lord Thy God in Vain.” Sermon title, “Profanity, Lying Un- der Oath and’ Present Day ever: ence.” The choir will sing the an- them entitled, “The Nanfe of Jesus,” by Lorentz, and the men’s quartet will sing’a special number. Adolph Englehurt will also play a violin solo. Organ music. Prelude, Fan- tasia, Mozart. Offertory, Kamennoi. Ostrow-Rubenstein. Postlude, . Bat- tle Prayer, Humnel. ‘ IN NEW YORK ‘New York, March 4.—Scattered eee from a ramble about Manhat-4 an: The Williamsburg bridge just after the ‘dawn... : And the. market places nearby... . faces. and the Voices of the world. . Trudging stolidly behind pushcarts. - Here-is Assyria and here Bucha- rest; here is the ancient Orient pp a’ face im nerations ha’ ere is the Holy and there Damascus. . All trudging over the great bridge with their little cartloads of vege- tables and fruits... . “Theirs is a heritage of market’ places... . Their brothers. sing the street chants of Palestine, Constantinople, Algiers, Tunis, Sofia and Smyrna. .e- - Theirs sre the voices and the faces of all the market places in the world.”. . ‘all the * By. suntup their carts fh colors of fruits and vegetables. . They have come, across thi bridge withthe dawn and paraded down’ the cob! pavement, clut+ tering the Recgigr d by the bri: and seatterin; rough the all of the east side, there ‘to eamp long hours, come rain, shine or snow, i». z The slush piles deep just now andall the refuse of the day forms a filthy, smelling river by ‘nightfall, flowing ‘slowly: to the gutters along the lanes of drab When the ‘njghta ld en then grow col ey brenk their botes aiid i en circles. about the communal fire: : No‘customers are out; but-the | code ‘of ‘the market places ‘prohibits: closing sho) : eG the; 3g Sag ticle sa and bent thei elders a word is spoken. ree Sat Pacific ‘Hotel gE Belek Thorwe ib, a ddan Ay ety, National Bask y so" Patriarch 3 and then a shawl-wrapped woman, whose dark skin grows ‘bronze.and the, reflection of the flames it, “comes'to stand wateh. The man’ disappears into the “They are like the pioneers ikked west in their covered who’ trel Here are the} ;, against ry iscourage- eve “| ment and difficulty. . . . They meet hunger, poverty ang privation’on their own’ terms" até ask no quar: ter. % 2 . . «+ They are strangely’ virile in atime when decaderite is all about. . , + Each is a potential merchant prince, though many have grown grey guarding a little rectangular cart while the children absorbed the ways, and habits: of an‘ alier: land and race... . q + J. Sometimes, after: nightfall, when the cluster of lights or. ‘the oil torch casts its’ wan glow over the sidewally a typical, bob-haired: flap- Pop ‘street. and op” arch of the push cart... . ‘or there are many attractive butter- flies from this strange :chrysal 5 . ‘But-it is upon a’ rainy. % that the dismal, dreary of - this cl a Tattered oT 3 falls all about, ..... The’ swim with torn cabbage leaves and skins ‘of fruit... Tucked in cheap overcoats ‘the little-- regiment of street merchants stand... .°: A few huddle in nearby doorways when the wind whips up the rain... °. There “are few le upon the streets’ and trade is ing: u Tl mn ‘day never seems to came to * ~ “GILBERT SWAN: (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)!_ ~ J a x x 4

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